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THE 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL 



A HandrBook of Information 



CONCERNING THE COURSES OF STUDY PURSUED, THE REQUIREMENTS OF ADMISSION 
AND APPROXIMATE COST OF A COLLEGIATE OR TECHNICAL COURSE OF 
INSTRUCTION AT THE PRINCIPAL AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES, COL- 
LEGES, TECHNICAL SCHOOLS AND OTHER INSTITUTIONS 
OF LEARNING FOR THE HIGHER EDUCATION 
OF YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN. 



Compiled and Edited 

/BY 



1 



C. POWELL KARR, C.E., PH.B. 

* (School of Mines, Columbia College*, and Member of the New York Architectural League. 



i 



PUBLISHED ANNUALLY 

BY 

WM. T. COMSTOCK, 23 Warren Street, 

NEW YORK. 






\ 



PREFACE 



The object of this little hand-book is to present, in the most condensed 
form possible, the courses of study pursued at our leading colleges and 
universities, with the time required to complete the amount of study de- 
manded ; the requirements of admission ; the cost of tuition and the ap- 
proximate cost of a college education, together with several statistical items 
of general interest. A few of our prominent colleges are conspicuous by 
their absence, owing to being received too late for insertion. The original 
intention was to embrace in the manual the Law, Medical, Divinity and 
Agricultural colleges and schools, but the addition of them to the present 
list would add so materially to the scope of the present edition, and delay so 
long its publication, that we have thought it best to postpone their insertion 
for the present. 

It was also intended to add a table of athletic pursuits and pastimes 
participated in by undergraduates, but replies to inquiries were so meagre 
and so late in being received as to compel its postponement until next year. 
The editor desires to add that he trusts the replies to inquiries upon matters 
of athletic interest will be more full and explicit in the future and to ex- 
press his pleasure at the hearty co-operation he has received from the 
Presidents and Secretaries of all the colleges applied to for information. 
The rapidity of the compilation which the lateness of the season compelled 
has undoubtedly been productive of many errors, both of omission and com- 
mission, and the editor would consider it a special favor if the college 
authorities would carefully study the manual and notify him of any that may 
be found in order that they may be rectified in the next edition. "Would 
also be pleased to receive all on our list of the college catalogues for 1889-90 
as early in 1889 as possible. 

Believing that the first table will show at a glance what courses are 
pursued at any college in the list ; that the requirements for admission may 
be found with like readiness, and that for purposes of comparison the 
manual will be found to be of the utmost value to both parent and student, 
it is sent forth with the hope of accomplishing its purpose as a guide and 
sign-post on the highway of education. 

THE EDITOR. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



Table No. I. 



Contains the Names, in Alphabetical Order, of the Leading Universities, Col- 
leges and Technical Schools, with their Presidents' or Presiding 
Officers' Address, Courses of Study, and Other Statis- 
tical Information of General Interest. 



Each college has allotted to it two columns. In the left hand column, or A, are the figures 
which denote the number of years of study required to complete the course to which it stands 
opposite on the left hand margin and page and to which it alone refers. In the right hand column, 
B, are figures which in a like manner refer alone to courses opposite in the right hand margin and 
page. For facility of reference, each course horizontally has been numbered ; thus, Civil En- 
gineering, in the left hand margin, is always 17, and Mining Engineering, in the right hand margin, 
is always 17. So. if on the left hand page, in column B, a figure appears on line 17, look to line 17, 
under (column B studies) for its reference ; and if, on the right hand page, a figure appears on line 17 
column A, look to line 17 (column A studies) for the true reference. Hence, the general rule where- 
ever a figure appears in a column opposite a course, look first to the line it is on and turn to the 
column A or B studies on the same line to find the true reference. The figures in this table mean 
yean. The letters p-g signify post-graduate course ; 1-n-s equals length of time not stated. 

In a number of colleges two or more courses of study are grouped together to form one course, 
and the reference letters in this table are used to indicate the correlated courses or studies. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



Table 





IB 

*<; 

g Pi 

si 

o 
o 
a 


o 
a 

s« 

S 

H - 

w.2 

s« 

o,- 

OP 

& 

H 

a 

M 

o 

O 


So" 
B - 

*i 
P 

w 

o 

o 


M 

si 

u 
v ■ 

s" 

go 

H+J 

S3 

OS 

w« 

S« 

£h 
H 
-« 

a 


a 
• » 

o O 

Oi — 

£ o 
go 

H a 
g§ 

' i*g 
PS 

Q 


*| 

B . 


O 

S 

as 

ss 

§0 
00 

s 

1= 


|h' 
B? 

SS 
a . 

50 

*P 

ti 
wa 

O 63 

*b 

3§ 
< 

X 


Number of Professors 


5 
29 

3798 
3 

M 
F 


13 

8 

577 

8 

M 

F 


47 
44 
1022 
21 
M 
F 


34 

8 

231 

10 

M 


33 
12 
852 
22 
M 
F 


4 

10 

165 

7 

F 


32 
9 

1078 

8 

M 

F 


12 


Number of Students 


141) 


Number of Courses of Study 

Admits Male — M 


10 
M 


Admits Female— F 












Column A — Studies 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 






Courses of Instruction. 

1 Anglo-Saxon 




2 Agriculture 










4 
















4 




















4 


3 




4 




3 






3 




















































fi Arboriculture 












4 
































4 
















2 






8 Art History and Criticism 






























9 Arts, or Classical 


lor5 




4 




4 




lor2 




4 




4 




4 


























12 Belles Lettres 




















2 
































1-n-s 
























































4 
4 




lor2 




1-n-s 


3 














16 Chemistry 






4 
4 




2m 




17 Civil Engineering 






4 






18 Civil Law 






















19 Comparative Philology 
















4 




4 
4 




















8 


4 










4 










21 Dentistry 








3 
























4 










23 Eclectic 
































24 English Language and Lit 


















3 












2 or 
4e 




25 Electrical Engineering 










4 or 
PB 1 


2 
4 


















26 Ethics 

27 Finance and Economy 








4 




2 


i" 


4 
2" 


'3' 






4 


3 


28 Fine Arts 






2 




29 French Language and Lit . . 














lor2 












30 












4 
























3 






1 




2 
3 












l&h 


32 Geology 














33 Greek Language and Lit 
















4 










3 


































35 Hebrew Language and Lit 
















































2 






3 




4 










37 Horticulture 

38 Hydraulic Engineering 






















39 Homeopathy.. . 




lor5 




4 




4 








4 




4 




4 






40 Indo-Iranian Languages 






41 Intellectual Philosophy. . 






























1 




42 Italian Language and Lit. . . 
































43 Industrial Art . . 










4 
2 






















44 Law and Jurisprudence 
















2 

4 








2 




4 




45 Latin Language and Lit 












46 Latin— Scientific 


















47 Linguistics 


































48 Letters 




















3 
3 














49 Literature 
































50 Literature and Art 


















4 














51 Lithology 
































52 Library Economy 





































































Notbs.— m, with Mineralogy ; 1 & a, with Law and History ; e, with Elocution and Rhetoric ; 1-n-s, Length of Course not Btated ; 
P-g, Post Graduate Course. 

General 2?ote.—Al\ figures that appear in the columns A and B refer to the number of years study required to complete the Course. 



No. I. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



m 

03 

a 

bOoa 

Ip : 
r 1 - 

MO 

p. 

50 

« 


art 
Sit 

►TO 

PS 

gfl, 

|w 


■d 
q 

M 

B 

M . 

as 
I« 

M Z 

K'S 

S^ 

■< 
5 
a 


ITNIVBE8ITY OF KANSAS, KailBaS. Mo. 

J. A. Lipplncott, D.D., Pres. 


Johns Hopkihs Univer., Baltimore, Md. 
Daniel C. Gllman, LL.D., Pres. 


i £ . 

§«' 

" d 
gW 

Is 


Leu [gii University, S. Bethlehem, Pa. 
Rohert A. Lamberton, LL.D., Pres. 




!i 

M r 

^«« 

g h 

m 
n 

-4 


,q 


1* 

la 

aS 
Gs" 

SS 
S2 

°« 

K ^ 

P 




64 

117 

1812 

24 

M 


21 
8 
343 
13 
M 
F 


19 
7 
398 
17 
M 
F 


34 
22 
489 
13 
M 
F 


22 
34 
420 
25 
M 


17 

5 

245 

10 

M 


12 
18 
401 
13 
M 


27 
54 

818 
11 
M 
F 


55 
37 
1667 
20 
M 
F 














A 


B 

1 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


Column B— Studies. 










4 

4 






4 




























2 ! 












4 






















2 
lor2 




















































Mechanical Drawing S 

Mechanical Engineering. 6 




3or4 


4 


4 


















4 


■4" 


4 




4 
3 














l-n-s 


























4 












4 




2 




4 
4 




i 
p-g-i 








4 
4 




Meteorology 9 

Metallurgy 10 

Metrology 11 
















































1 


































2 
















4 




14 










4 


























4 
4 


3 
V 




























Mineralogy 16 

Mining Engineering 17 

Modelling 18 


2 


4 




4* 
4 




2 


l-n-s 


4 
4 


2" 


4 
4 


4m 


4 
4t 


'i" 


4 
4 


i 












2 
2 




4 










2 




























4or6 
4 




















S 


.... 


4 






















4 


2 




Natural History 21 


































4 








3 














4 


2 


Philology 26 

Physical Culture 28 


A 








4 






4p 




4 
4 








4 


2 




















3 












l-n-s 


2 


4 






4 

4 


l-n-s 




1 
2 
3 
2 




l-n-s 




l-n-s 


3 


4 




4 


2 2 




... 2 


















4 
2 

i' 
4 




lY 


l-n-s 
2 
2 

2 
















l-n-s 




2" 

2 




1 
4 


4 
4 
4 

3 














4 


Railroad Engineering 34 

Romance Philology 35 


a 


3 














a 




























3 


















2 


3 




































Rhetoric and Oratory 37 

Sanitary Engineering 38 

Scientific 39 
























2 

4 




























4 










1 
p-g-i 






3 


4 


p, 
























Spanish Language & Lit. 42 

Steam Engineering 46 

Topographic Engineer'g. .47 
Theology 48 




2 
1 
































1 
























le 


2 




'2" 


1-ns 


















.... l-n-s 










2 
4 




3 

2 










?, 








4 
































4 












































































4 














4 








































































































































4 






3 























Notes. — * and Physics ; 
Engineering. 



4, to ill Courses: p, with Physics; m, with Metallurgy; e, with Electricity; t, with Topographical 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



Table 





« 

M 

II 
<** 

n 
< 

• <1 


a 
o 

S . 

cj - 

3^ 
gh 

r 

< 


Is 

<n 


O - 

ho 

JO 

B 


on 

OQ 

«° 

Oh 

oE 
a?- 
o 

B 


6 
a 
"3 

■si 

la r 

i«: 

oW 

w • 
j> 

C O 

op 
Is 

1^ 

o 
K 


D 

g Ai 
w r 

§11 

ow_; 
o W 

B I 

« a 

o 

« 
B 


K 
oT . 
a v 

> r 
£Q 
SMQ 
Ha 

E- O 

5* 
o 

a 


Number of Professors 

Number of Other Instructors 

Number of Students 


11 

7 

238 

12 

M 


4 
14 
413 
13 
M 
F 


19 

10 

350 

8 

M 


12 

11 

265 
10 
M 


75 

44 

775 

11 
M 
F 


16 

261 

3 

M 


16 
35 

770 

4 

M 


16 

6 

260 


Number of Courses of Study 

Admits Male — M 


8 
M 


Admits Female — F 



















Column A — Studies 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 






Courses of Instruction. 




3 Agriculture 


























. 












3 


2 


3 




2 


1-n-s 


3p-e 




ialso 
p-g-1 
































































6 Arboriculture 






















































3 


4 


2 


















6 










4 


2 




4 




















1 


1 




1 


































IP 


































1 




2 






















































1-n-s 




























16 Chemistry 


3 

4 


1-n-s 




8 


2g 


2m-n 


































4 1 . . . 


18 Civil Law 


m 

a' 




























19 Comparative Philology 




4 
4 








4 


























3 






1 








31 Dentistry 














































33 Eclectic 


































24 English Language and Lit 


3 












4e 




















25 Electrical Engineering . . . 




























26 Ethics ! 


































27 Finance and Economy 








1 




3h-a 
1 
1 




4 




a-b 












4 


28 Fine Arts 




















29 French Language and Lit. . . 








2 








3 














90 














31 Geodetic Engineering . . . 


































33 Geology. 


In 
3 












4z-b 










1 










33 Greek Language and Lit 




4 
























34 German Language and Lit . . . 




























35 Hebrew Language and Lit . . . 


































36 History 




4 








4p-h 












































38 Hydraulic Engineering . . . 






























































4 






40 Indo-Iranian Languages 






























41 Intellectual Philosophy. . 


































42 Italian Language and Lit . . . 


































43 Industrial Art 


































44 Law and Jurisprudence .... 


1 
3 
















3 
















45 Latin Language and Lit 




























46 Latin— Scientific 
































47 Linguistics 


































48 Letters 
















4 




3or4 














49 Literature 






4 














4 








50 Literature and Art 


























51 Lithology 


































52 Library Economy 































































NOTE8.- 



-n, with Natural History ; p, with Political Economy ; m, with Metallurgy ; g, with Geology; h-a, with History and Art; 
inn, with Mineralogy; e, with Elocution ; z-b, with Zoology and Botany ; ph, with Physics ; a-b, Advanced Course in Philosophy, one 
year ; 1-n-s, Length of Course not stated ; p-g, Post Graduate Course. 



No. I. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



d 

it 

3°: 

OB 

go 
go 

a v 
U M 
B M 

n 


03 
Ph 

U 

SDlJ 

H - 
M 

P 


d 

% 
p 
p 
"3 

Qm 

5£ 

a> ; 

Bl 

f 

s 

D 
5 


City of N. r. University, New York. 
John Hall, D.D., Chancellor. 


O 
« . 

►J* 
fc'p. 

g* 

hi 

o 
o 


College of N. J. (Princeton University), 

Princeton, N. J. 

James McCosh, D.D., Prcs. 


5 . 

.02 

H 

P9S 
^ n 
hi s- 

°,S 

Ufa 



o 


University of Colorado, Boulder, Col. 
Horace M. Hale, A.M., Pres. 


d 

d 

Cm 

£'» 

s* 

in 

jjgf 

hS 
>H 

P s 

*d 
•< . 

So 

S^ 

P 

hi 

o 

o 




9 

17 


10 

8 

259 

9 

M 

F 


11 

2 

118 
16 
M 
F 


47 
43 
892 
24 
M 


12 

28 

939 

3 

M 


36 

6 

603 

27 

M 


51 
110 
1843 
31 
M 
F 


10 

4 

136 

8 

M 

F 


33 




379 
12 

M 

F ! 


481 
12 
M 
F 




1 










A | B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B ! 


A 


B 


A | B 


A 


B 


A ! 


B 


A 


B 


Column B — Studies. 


















, 
































4a 




4a 






l-n-s 


4 




3* 


p-g-l 


4n-s 
4 


4a c 


4 








4 
























Mechanical Drawing 5 

Mechanical Engineering. 6 






.... 










?, 1 










4 

4 
4 


2 

4" 
4 


4 


3 




3 










4 
4 


l-n-s 


4 


l-n-s 1 


5 




4 


. 1 

1 


Meteorology 9 

Metallurgy 10 

Metrology 11 
















4 












4 






1 






4c 


! 












14 




















| 


























4 
3 


































4 
4 ' 










J [110 

4 


P-g-l 


2 
4 


4 






4 
4 




Mining Engineering 17 

Music ... 20 


























4 


4 


21 




1 












4 








4 
















4 




4 




4 
















1 
















m 

p-e-i 


















4 




















P-gl 












Philology 26 

Philosophy 27 


4 




4 








4 






.... 


P-g-l 


4 








4 






















4 
4 


4 

4n 
4 
4 
4 
l-n-s 


h" 
4 








4 


4p 
4 


2e-p 

2 

p-g-l 

2s-s 

3 




4 




4 




l-n-s 




4c 






.... ! 


Physical Culture 28 


1 


















4b 

p-g-l 


P-g-l 






















1 


3 


4 




Preparatory 32 

Railroad Engineering 34 


4 
3 




4 












.... 
























1 

n-ffi 












1 




1-ns 




l-n-s 








.... 










4 










Rhetoric and Oratory 37 

Sanitary Engineering 38 
















4 




5 




4 






4 




4 


Scientific 39 




























4 
























Semitic Languages 41 
















Spanish Language & Lit. 42 
























~2~" 

4 














1 












2 

4 
















4 


2 

4 






4 




4 




4 






































4 


. 
















4 


3 






Topographic Engineer'g. .47 
Theology 4S 










l-n 








4 In 




P-g-l 




















































































2 




























i| 





















Notes— a, with Astronomy j c, with Chemistry ; 1, with Literature ; n, with Natural History ; In, with Language ; m, with Mathe- 
matics ; mi, with Mineralogy ; b, with Biology ; n-s, with Natural Science ; a-c, with Applied Chemistry ; p, Paleontology ; e-p, with. 
Ethics and Psychology, 8-8, with Social Science;, l-n-s, Length of Course not stated ; p-g, Post Graduate Course. 



IO 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



Table 





« 

e.i 

M - U 

1 d 

3 


1 

Ss. 

a<i 

►Je) 

SI 
i| 

r 

3 


i "' 

o £ 

Kd : 

?§.§ 
B k. 


V 

- p^ 

s 3. 

Son 

6$ 

r" 3 _ 
GQ.=- so 
M O fe 

Eos 

P (-3 

O 

m OS 

— ~ 
C 

3 

U3 


H 

O 
H 

Hi 

hi 

O d 

£ 

5 a .S 

fi O 63 

Sag 

1 1 

5 5 

o ^ 

w 

S 


1 * 

P .fc 

» -- 

H CD 

> o 

1 s 


d 

o 

as 

IS 

°I 
«S 

as 

o • 

oW 

53 
^>^ 

K 
H 

ra 
O 


o 

5 

3 
A in 

S£ 

o r 

°S 

ai 
1! 

g« 

hB 
5& 
&- 

Efi 

o 
a 

o 


Number of Professors 


4 

19 

181 

5 


"'is'" 

339 
6 


35 
8 
413 
36 
M 
F 


39 
8 
530 
30 
M 
F 




27 
14 
531 
12 
M 


30 
33 

1417 

7 

M 

F 


38 


Number of Other Instructors 

Number of Students 


41 

314 

20 


10 

343 

24 

M 

F 


Number of Courses of Study 

Admits Male — M 


Admits Female— F 


F 


F 


P 






Column A — Studies 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 




Courses of Instruction. 




3 Agriculture 










4 


■la Is... 
p-g-1 


3 
8 
















4or2 










4 




4 


4 


4 










3 

4 


4 Analytical Chemistry 
















5 Applied Chemistry 






















6 Arboriculture 












4 












4 




















i also 
P-g-1 

4aUo 
l>g-l 


6 
m 


3 
4 

1-n-s 






4 








1 

4 
4 
















9 Arts, or Classical 




4 




4 




4 


































4 


















1 


























4 


















14 Botanical Science 
















4 
































3 

* 

3 


1 


16 Chemistry 














4 
3 














2 

4 














1 also 
P-g-1 








1 










18 Civil Law 












19 Comparative Philology 








4 
1-n-s 




1-n-s 


4 




4 
1-n-s 


i" 


4 










31 Dentistry 




2or4 






1-n-s 






33 Dynamical Engineering 












d el 






















33 Eclectic 










p-g-l 
4 




4 
3 


3 


















34 English Language and Lit 


4 




4 








3 




35 Electrical Engineering 










3 


36 Ethics 




























37 Finance and Economy 

38 Fine Arts 


2or4 





1-n-s 




.,.. 




3 


i" 


1-n-s 
4 


i" 


1-n-s 




1-n-s 


4 


'2" 


4 


39 French Language and Lit. . 




30 
























or 4 


31 Geodetic Engineering. . 












1 


4 

4" 
4 
























2 




3 


p-g-l 


i 


2 


4 
4 
4 


4 




3 




2or3 


2 
4 
2 


2 


33 Greek Language and Lit 




34 German Language and Lit . . . 






















35 Hebrew Language and Lit 
























. 








4 
















38 Hydraulic Engineering 
































ialso 
P-e-l 




6 








4 










40 Indo-Iranian Languages 














41 Intellectual Philosophy. . 
































43 Italian Language and Lit. . . 


































43 Industrial Art 






























44 Law and Jurisprudence 














3 

4 








3 












45 Latin Language and Lit 










p-g-l 










3 




46 Latin— Scientific 


































3 
3' 


















48 Letters 














6 




1 






4 


3 






49 Literature 










4 also 
P-g-1 






50 Literature and Art 


















































3 


53 Library Economy 
















































4 




4 












4 



Ge<S?ai7™ r t .°„ be „ t ?S..T 1 o l1 Mathematical Course ; g, to be taken with Greek Language and Literature Course; •, forms part of the 
to complete i the cours* efeired to Course i 1-n - s - Length of Course not stated. Figures In column signify number of years required 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



II 



No. I. 



Q £ 

<;°Ph 

2s S 
saw 


Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg, Pa. 
Harvey W. McKnIght, D.D., Pres. 


2 - 
5 S 

t> o 
J Ir 

ma. r 

fc 03 <U 

o-a o. 

p 

1* 


|s 

tn - 

mS 
£S 

B CO 

t=B 
H • 
P"' 
Q 

m 

P 
Ph 


P 

n 

& d 

2 £ 

B 

a <j 

ri 
H 
(0 

n 

B 


en ~ 

o . -: 
M -^ 

° m ° 

tngg 

on o d 

S«« 
fc « - 
& « 


« r 
tow 

|I 

02 


S3 

if 
o 

So 

R t. 
3PH 

B o 
l*ri 

«I 

riO 
ri ■ 

o H 

mS 

K 

H 

pi 


OS 

a _ 

§£ 

U 

U 

H 
DQ 




3 

31 


8 
5 

193 

18 
M 
F 


71 
60 

1187 
16 

M 


16 
8 
368 
22 
M 
F 


8 

8 

154 

2 

M 


ii 
ire' ' 

3 

M 


7 

11 

207 

3 

F 


16 


8 

19 

376 

6 




155 

4 

M 




19 




F 


F 


















A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


Column B — Studies. 




Marine Engineering. 1 

Machine Design 2 














4 also 
p-g-1 


3 also 
p-g-1 














2 










2also 
P-K-l 




P-g-2 














































5a 
























Mechanical Drawing 5 

Mechanical Engineering. 6 














4 also 
P-g-1 


























4 
p-g-2 




4 


3 also 
P-Rl 






























4 
















Meteorology 9 

Metallurgy 30 

Metrology 11 

Mental & Moral Science. .12 
Microscopy 13 




4 




4 




4 


4 


l-B-l 


"unn 






































2al30 






2 




Pgl 






























































Military Science. . . , 15 

Mineralogy 16 

Mining Engineering 17 

Modelling 18 

Music . . 20 






P-g-2 




5m 
5 




4 also 
P-g-1 


3 


4 












4 
4 










3 also 

■n-s& 

3 also 
p-g-1 




















































2 
5 


3 






















3 














Natural History 21 












4 
































4 


















Salso 


P-g2 






























p-g-1 










2 






















Pharmacy 25 

Philology 26 

Physical Culture 28 












































2 


4 


































T. 


















4 
















3 


P-g-2 


p-g-2 
3 








































2or3 










Railroad Engineering 34 

Romance Philology 35 
































2 










3p 

4 
















































Rhetoric and Oratory 37 

Sanitary Engineering 38 


































4 








4 








4 












4 
























Semitic Languages 41 

Spanish Language & Lit. 42 

Special Research 44 

Topographic Engineer'g. .47 

Theology 48 

Teaching (Normal) 49 






















































































4also 
p-g-1 


p-g-i 






























2also 
p-g-2 




















P-g-2 


































































































2 




































4alsc 
P_g-1 




















4 












































3 


4 































































... 




I.... 

























Notes.— m, with Mineralogy; a, with Architecture; 
■lty Includes a Department of Domestic Economy. 



p with Political Science ; mn, with Mining ; h, with History ; *, Purdue Univer- 



12 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



Table 



Number of Professors 

Number of Other Instructors. 

Number of Students 

Number of Courses of Study . 

Admits Male — M 

Admits Female— P 



Column A — Studies. 



Courses of Instruction. 

1 Anglo-Saxon 

2 Agriculture 

3 Ancient Languages 

4 Analytical Chemistry 

5 Applied Chemistry 

6 Arboriculture 

7 Architecture 

8 Art History and Criticism. . . 

9 Arts, or Classical 

10 Astronomy 

11 Archaeology 

13 Belles Lettres 

13 Biology 

1-4 Botanical Science 

15 Bridge Engineering 

16 Chemistry 

17 Civil Engineering 

18 Civil Law . 



o o 

CD t a) 



* 9 - 

M te O 

t $ 



15 
16 
333 
16 
M 



19 Comparative Philology. 

20 Commercial 

21 Dentistry 

22 Dynamical Engineering. 



23 Eclectic. 

24 English Language and Lit. 

25 Electrical Engineering 



26 Ethics. 

27 Finance and Economy 

28 Fine Arts 

29 French Language and Lit. 
30 



SS 



1-n-s 



1-n-s 
1 



1-n-s 



31 Geodetic Engineering 

32 Geology 

33 Greek Language and Lit. . . 

34 German Language and Lit . 

35 Hebrew Language and Lit . 

36 History 

37 Horticulture 

38 Hydraulic Engineering 

39 Homeopathy 

40 Indo-Iranian Languages 

41 Intellectual Philosophy. ... 

42 Italian Language and Lit. . 

43 Industrial Art 

44 Law and Jurisprudence 

45 Latin Language and Lit . . . 

46 Latin— Scientific 



47 Linguis 

48 Letters 

49 Literature 

50 Literature and Art. 



51 Lithology. 



52 Library Economy . 

53 Logic 



11 

5 

170 

11 

M 



S fc 

H . - 



h 






p*2 
SB" 



3 « 



11 

3 

175 
11 
M 



1 
1-n-s 



3 



J 

3 



lm 



1-n-s 



4h 



1-n-s 
4 



Sri 

~ 1) 



S". 



H - ^ 



E6S 

s a 



13 

170 
22 
M 
F 



A B 



1-n-s 

1 1-ll-S 1-n-s* 



15 

365 
11 
M 



-I- 

-_ o 






EI 

BOO 



A 



l-n-e 
d 



1 
1-1 

4 4 



lp 



24 
23 

284 

8 

M 

F 



? 5 






- - 



9 
9 

112 
4 

M 



3s 



H - 



16 
34 
155 
10 
M 



A B 



1-n-s 



A 



4m-g 
4m-e 



* B-e 



4o 



NoTES.-m, with Mineralogy; h * a, including History and Art; c, Including Chemistry; h.taclnainsHiBtory^ ^Afg^l^J^j 
trlcity: d.wlth Drawing: p, including Phonography; mg, with Mineralogy; m-e, including Military Engineering, g-e, wiui «™bwj 
and Ethics ; o, Including Ordnance and Gunnery. 

general Hole— Figures imply the number of years required to complete the Course referred to. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



13 



No. I. 



>• 

s 
» 
a 

gg-l 

gacQ 

^" 

Q ^ 

H 

H 

1 


s 

a 

u 

P 

w 

go" 

— - 

s« 

s°. 


O 

S.S 

■M - 

•&Q 
?3 
o-l 

**: 

£• 

5* 

«^ 
•< 

m 

m 

< 
> 


Vihginia University, Albemarle, Va. 
0. S. Venable, LL.D., Chairman of Faculty. 




s 

to" 
3d 

53 

r- --' 

►.■a 

m^ 

t% ■ 
KM 

©2 

E-S 


OS 

s« 

3s 

si 

ofi 

fed 
s| 

H 


Wesleyan College, Cincinnati, Ohio. 
W. K. Brown, D.D., Pies. 


sS 

O 
« 

So 

Km 

^s 
£° 
t- 

H 

Hi 

SO 

M 


ft, 

si 
Is 

< a 

><0 

H - 

PI 

£ e 

tW 

I s ' 




13 


38 

23 

625 

25 

M 


14 

19 

294 

24 


19 
10 
366 
30 
M 


21 
15 
416 
11 
M 


20 

54 

627 

17 






8 

9 

175 

12 




60 

229 
11 
M 


30 

207 

8 


21 

284 

5 






F 


F 


F 


F 


JI 














A 


1 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 


Column B — Studies. 












Marine Engineering. 1 














2 

a-pi 
P-g-l 


lalso 
p-g-l 
























4 
2 





p-g-l 
or 3 




4 








1 












3 








































Mechanical Drawing 5 

Mechanical Engineering. 6 






2 
2 




































2 




























1 
4 






















4 












4 


0111 


4 




4 








1 




P-B-I 

31-n-s 


2also 
P-g-l 


1 


2alBO 
P-g-l 

a 
I-n-H 


l also 
P-g-l 


Metrology 11 




























1 
























1 








1 




1 
















lorS 
2 






















Military Science 15 

Mineralogy IS 

Mining Engineering 17 

Modelling IS 

Natural History 21 




2" 


2 




2also 
p-g-l 
2 


2 


5 
5 




i 


11-g 










2 
2 


lg 






























2 


2 


2also 
P-B-l 

I-n-s 

Pgl,3 




P-g-l 
3also 
P-g-l 

]>El 


ialso 
PB-1 

B 

P-g-l 
























5 






5 




3 




1-n.s 












































Pedagogy :>3 

Pharmacy 25 

Philology 26 

Philosophy 27 

Physical Culture 28 






p-g-l 

or 3 


2 


4 


3 


1-n-s 


2" 






3 




4 








4 










































2c 




pg-1 

31-n-s 
P-gl 
or 3 
1 n-s 


4 

4 
4 

3alao 
P-gl 


cl 

p-g-l 
1 n-s 

'4" 


'2" 

3alao 
P-g-l 

2 


2also 
P-g-l 
"2 ." 


i" 


4 


5" 


las 


3" 


4 


1-n-s 


P-B-8 


1 


4" 




Physics 29 




















1 
















1 


p-g-l 
or 8 




3 




1 






Preparatory 32 

Railroad Engineering 34 




3 

1 












2 
1 














3 
















.... 




1 


















2 


C" 




Rhetoric and Oratory 37 






























4 




















4 


















.... 




Semitic Languages 41 










































































Spanish Language & Lit. 42 
Special Research 44 

iTopographic Engineer'g. .47 

Theology 4S 

Teaching (Normal) 49 




ls-g 
















5 


















1 










2 
P-g-l 




2 




1 


P-g-l 
or 3 




"4" 


















3 
























.... 


. 
































3 








































4s 




' 


1-n-s 








































































































... 


|.... 
















lp 

















Xotes.— c. including Chemistry ; s-g, Seamanship and Gunnery; a-p, including Agricultural Chemistry and Pharmacy ; a, with Agricul- 
ture ; g, including Geology ; h, with Historical Science ; s, including Science ; m, including Mining ; 1-g, Including Llthology and Geology ; 
as, with Astronomy ; p. Including Physiology ; 1-n-s, Length of Course not stated. 



H 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 

Table No. I. 



• 


Williams College, Williamstown, Mass. 
Franklin Carter, Ph. D., Pres. 


1 

a 
o 

cs ■— 

St, 

SB 
sS 

f? 

a 
o 

D 

09 

IS 


© 
3 

tT 

0) 




■r.1j 
H O 
wW 





s 

H 

p . 

S3 

HO. 

g-B 

sS 

K r 

gP 

O V 
H ■ 




Yale Univbbsitt, New Haven, Conn. 
Timothy Dwight, D.D., Pres. 




Number of Professors 


16 

7 

282 

10 

M 


39 
16 
637 
38 
M 
F 


14 
5 
625 
22 
M 
P 


10 

4 

157 

5 

M 


64 
50 
1345 
21 
M 




Number of Courses of Study 
















A 


B 


A 

2 

i or 

more 

4 


B' 


A 


B 


A 


B 


A 


B 








Courses of Instruction. 










'4" 
3 

4 

4 


p-g-2 
or 3 


P-g-8 
or 3 

P-g-2 
orSa 

2 

2 or 

?..?_-f 






3 
4* 


"i" 






2 
























3 

3 


3 

4 


3 
3 


Mechanical Engineering. 6 
























Meteorology 9 

Metrology 11 












4 




1 




1-n-s 


4 








































4 








1-n-s 

k" 

4 
4 
3 












2 


Microscopy 13 

14 


15 Bridge Engineering 






1-n-s 

4ge 

4 


D-g-2 
or 3 




3 




'2" 

2 




Military Science. . . 15 

Mining Engineering 17 

Music 20 


















2 


4 
4or6 




2 or 

3p-g 

4 








4 










2 
4 


Natural History 21 
































Philology 26 








4 


2 
4 




4 






















1-n-s 


2S Fine Arts 




1 








3 




29 French Language aud Lit 




1 


3 


1 
2 




3 or 
3p-g 

p-g-2 
or 3 
lor2 




3 


Physics 29 

Political Economy 30 


2 


4 


33 Geology 


1 
3 




4 
2or4 














Psychology 33 






































Romance Philology 35 


36 History 


1 


i" 


2or4 


'4' 










4 
















Rhetoric and Oratory 37 

Sanitary Engineering 38 

Scientific 39 
















































4 














Sculpture 40 






























4 














Spanish Language & Lit. 43 








3 
4 










2 






2 




































.... 


3 














Topogi'aphic Engineer'g. .47 
Theology 48 

53 








4 










3 
































































2or3l 

















Noteb.— ge, Including Geology ; *, and Linguistics ; 1-n-s, Length of Course not stated ; p-g, Post Graduate Course. 

General iVbie.— All two year Courses at Yale are taken In the Junior and Senior years, and require two years of preparation to enter 
them. Post Graduate Courses may be taken In all the Sciences, and are not here enumerated. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 1 5 

Table No. 2. 



REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION TO COURSES FOR WHICH 
A DEGREE IS CONFERRED UPON YOUNG MEN. 



EXPLANATIONS. 

Note. — Where two or more studies are enclosed in brackets the studies so enclosed are to be taken 
together as though they were but one. The only exception to this rule is where the studies are sepa- 
rated by the conjunction or, then only one of the studies mentioned need be offered for examination. 

Where more than one text-book on the same subject is referred to, the applicant may prepare on 
any one of the group mentioned. Wherever a dash occurs between two letters it is to signify that 
all the studies included between the first and last letter inclusive are required. 

Reference Table A contains a complete key to both figures and letters referred to under the gene- 
ral head of Requirements. Figures generally represent the subject matter, and the letters both the 
text-book recommended or preferred and the amount of preparation required. 



ALABAMA UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements (See reference table A for key to both figures 

and letters), ldgh; 2 b f or i ; 3 d e ; 5a; 11 a e or d ; 12 b e p ; 13 c ; 15 ; 16 d ; 18 v j ; 20 a ; 21 a b 

cord; 24 jh; 27 h c. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, ldgh; 2bfori; 3de; 5a; 11 a e or 

d; 12bep; 13 c 15* ; 16*; 18 j; 21 ab cord; 24 n ; 27 c h. 
Engineering Dept. — Course, Engineering. — Degree, C. E. M. E. — Requirements, ldgh; 2bfori; 3de; 5a; 

18 v ; 21 a b c or d ; 24 j. 

ALBION COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, ladg; 2m; 3a; 5i; 9n; 10 f; 11 a; 12 b 
ipt; 13osy; 151; 18v; 21ig; 22c; 25kh; 26qtu; 27 q r ; 2Sf; 29 h ; 30h; 31d; 32 g. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Latin Scientific. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, ladg; 2m; 3a; 5i; 9n; 10 f; 
11a; 12b ipt; 13osy; 18 v; 21 g; 22 c; 25 kh; 26qtu; 27 q r ; 29 h ; 30 h; 31 d; 32 g. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, ladg; 2m; 3a; 5i; 9n; 10 f; 11a; 

12bipt; 13asy; 15 1 (optional) ; 18 v; 21 g; 22 c; 25 kh; 26 q t u ; 27 q r ; 29 h ; 30 h ; 31 d; 32 g. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, English. — Degree, B. S.— Requirements, ladg; 2m; 3a; 5i; 10 f; 18 q r ; 20 b; 
21gh; 22c; 25kh; 26quat; 27qr; 29k; 30h; 31d; 32fg. 

AMHERST COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B.— Requirements, leg; 2b; 3 a — f ; 5 i (9 c n or 10 a c) ; 11 m o 
(12cth; 14 q; 13 o; 12 k— mo r); 13 a 1 ;(14e or 13 i and 13 b); 151; (16 b or e) ; 16 1 g ; 17 g; 18 s; 21 q; 
22 f; 24st; 27 m b. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, leg; 2b; 3 a — f; 5i; (9 c n or 10 a c) ; 

11 m o ; (12 c t h ; 14 q ; 13 o ; 12 k— m or; 13 a 1 ; (14 e or 13 i and 13 b) ; 18 s ; 21 q ; 22 f ; 24 j ; 26 a v; 
27 mb 

BELOIT COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 g h ; 2b: 3 o a ; 5 i ; 11 a or d ; 12 b ; 13 a i 

g m ; 14 f ; 15 c or b ; 16 b k a ; 20 r s ; 24 j ; 25 k ; 26 x ; 27 r s ; 30 h. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, same as Classical. 

BOSTON UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lgi; 2b; 3abf; 5i; 9c; 11 ms; (12cor 

[12 b and 13 m] ; 12 k p t o m r) ; 13 a or (i and b) ; 13 1 ; 14 e ; 15 q ; 16 i h ; x or o ; 20 a c ; 21 q ; 22 f ; 

24 u; 27mtb; 29 d ; 34 d. 
Agricultural Dept. — Course, Agriculture. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, leg; 2b; 3 x ; 18 b ; 24 j ; 26 a. 
Musical Dept. — Course, Musical. — Degree, B. M. — Requirements, 2 a ; 3 x ; 6f; (9 c or 10 c or 33 p); 12t; 18v; 

20b; 21iklm; 22c; 24j(op.)*; 26 t a ; 28 g ; 29h; 30f(op.)*; 30h(op,)*; 31d(op.)*; 311(op.)*; 

31h(op.)*; 34htok; 341. 

BOWDOIN COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lgh; 2b; 3oa; 5i; 11 d or a; o; 12porr; 

12 c; 13mna; 14 f; 15 a orb; 16abk; 20 a; 21 n ; 24 n; 271. 

BROOKLYN COLLEGIATE AND POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Liberal. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2k; 3r; 21 i ; 25m g; 28 d; 31]"; 32 e; 

33 d i j. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, Same as Classical. 



• The applicant must offer three of the marked optional studies. 



1 6 AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL, 

BROWN UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3wdef; 5i; 9 b dm; 11m; 12 cor 
[b 13 m] ; 12 y ; p r ; klmo; 13 a or [c i] ; 1 , Hbm; 15 a ; 16 v ; 17 e ; [10 r ; 17 q] ; or [16 a ; 17 r] ; 
20 a; 21 q; 22 f ; 24 st; 27 m ; rs; 28 n ; 35 r [17 op] 35 v [16 i; 17 s]. 

Philosophical Dept. — Course, Greet — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 2b; 3wedf; 5i; 9bdm; 12 d; 
15 a ; 16 v ; [16 r, 17 q] or [16 a 17 r] ; 20 a ; 21 q ; 22 f ; 35 r ; [17 op]; v ; [16 i, 17 s] ; w. 

Philosophical Dept. — Course, Latin. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 2b; 3defw; 5i; 9bdm; 11m; 
12 d ; c or [b, 13, m] ; y ; k ; lmopr; 13 a or [e i] ; 1 ; 20 a ; 21 q ; 22 £ ; 35 w. 

Philosophical Dept. — Course, English. — Degree, Ph. B.— Requirements, 2b; Sdefw; 5i; 9bdm; 13d: 
20 a; 21 q; 22 f; 35 w. 

BUCHTEL COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 2 b ; 3a; 5i; 11a or d; 13 b; 13 a; s; 14 d; 

15 a orb; c; 16c ka; 18 1; 26 a; 27 sn; 32 j. 
Philosophy Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3a; 5i; 11 a or d ; 12 b; 13 

as; Ud; 18 tm; 25 i; k; 26 a; 27 r; 28 f; 30 h ; 33 j. 
Science Dept. — Course. Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a; 5i; 11 a or d; 12 b; 14 d; 18 tm; 

22 m ; 25 i ; k ; 26 a ; 28 f ; 29 a ; 30 n ; 32 j ; 34 s. 

BUCKNELL COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B.— Requirements, lc; 2b; 3x; 5n; 11 dor a; 12 c; 13 a; 

14 d; x; 15 a; 16 b; 1 ; 18 v ; 19 d; a ; 20a; 21 y ; 22m; 24 j ; 35 s ; 26 x ; 27 zm ; 29 h; 30dst ; 

31 n. 
Scientific Dept.— Course, Latin Scientific — Degree, B. S.— Requirements, lc; 2b; 3x; 5n; 11 dor a; 12 c; 

18 v ; 19 d q ; 20 a ; 21 y ; 22 m ; 24 j ; 25 s k ; 26 x ; 27 z m ; 29 h ; 30 d s t ; 31 n. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Greek Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, lc; 2b; 3x; 5n; 15k; 16 bl; 

lSv; 19 dq; 20 a; 21 y; 22m; 24 j; 35sk; 26x; 27zm;29h; 30dst; 31 n. 

CINCINNATI UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 2a; 3s; 6g; 8e; llwvr; 12 c i; 13 as; 

14 d n : 15 c n ; 16 b 1 a ; 17 h ; 19 g m u w ; 20 f v ; 27 r o. 
Literary Dept. — Course, Letters.— Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 2a; 3s- 6g; llwvr; 12ct; 13as; 14 

dn; (15 en, 16b la, 17 h)*; 19gmuw; 20fy; 17 ro. 

Scientific Dept.— Course, Scientific— Degree, B. S. ; C. E.— Requirements, 2a; 3s; 6g; 8hi; 9 n or 10 f or 
[12 b, 13 d, 12 1] ; 19 g m u w ; 20 f v ; 29 h ; 31 m. 

tCITY OF N. Y. UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lg; 2b; 3 b g v ; 4b; 5r; 11 a; 12 c; 13 a 
m ; 13 n or i ; r ; 14 d ; 15 a or b ; 16 b 1 a ; 18 a ; 21 i ; 23 ; 24 a ; 26 a ; 27 r s. 

Scientific Dept.— Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S.— Requirements, 3 b ; 3b gv; 4b; 5r; 9o; 18 at; 24a; 
26 a. 

Engineering Dept.— Course, Civil Engineering. — Degree, C E. — Requirements. — 2 b ; 3 g (complete) ; 5 r ; 
8 a (complete) ; 9 n c ; 18 a ; 21 i ; 28 e ; 33 h. 

COLLEGE OF CITY OF N. Y. (UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF N. Y.) 

Classical Dkpt.— Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 30 d; 5d; 11 d f ; 18k; 30a; 33eh; 29 f; 

31 e; 33 j. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 3od; 5d; 9stu; 18 k; 22 eh; 29 f; 

31 e; 32 j. 

COLLEGE OF NEW JERSEY (PRINCETON UNIVERSITY). 

Classical Dept. — Course, Academic— Degree, A. B. — Requirements, laghj; 2b; 3ab; 5a; 11 1 v ; 12 d; 

13 (a ; r or s ; m or n) ; 14 d ; 15 b c g ; 16 a k ; 16 b or e ; 17 c ; 18 a or b ; 19 t or 20 e ; 24 b k 1 m ; 26 

d or 1. 
Scientific Dept.— Course, Scientific— Degree, B. S. — Requirements, ladghj; 2b; 3ab; 4bc; 5t; 9dor 

1 ; and m ; 11 m n ; 12 d q ; 14 b ; 18 a b or c ; 19 1 or 21 f ; 24 b ; 25 e ; 26d or c 
Engineering Dept. — Course, Civil Engineering. — Degree, C. E. — Requirements, ladghj; 2b; 3ab; 4bc; 

5 t ; 9m; d or 1 ; 18 a b or c ; 19 1 or 21 f ; 24 b ; 25 e ; 26 d or c 

COLORADO UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2bt; 4h; 61; 11 lg; 12 pre; 13a; 14 d; 

15aorb; 16cx; k; 17 c; k; 18 v q ; 24kl; 27r; 28 f. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 2bt; 4h; 61; 11 lg; 12 pre; 

13 a ; 14 d ; 18 q v ; 34 k 1 ; 26 t ; 27 r ; 28 f ; 35 r [39 a, 31 1, 10 v]. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2b t; 4h; .61; 10 k orb; 11 lg; 12 c z ; 

13 a ; 14 d ; IS v q ; 24 k 1 ; 26 1 ; 28 f ; 39 h ; 311. 
Literary Dept.— Course, Literary.— Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 18 v ; 30 b ; 23 1 ; 25 h m ; 36 1 ; 38 f ; 39 b^ 

30 p q or r ; 31 q m. 



* In lieu of Greek, as above, the full high school amount of French or German may be offered. 

t The Chemical Course requires for admission same examination as Science Course, with addition of an examination in Elementary 
Chemistry. A diploma is awarded, however, and not a degree at graduation. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. I 7 

COLUMBIA COLLEGE. 

Classical, Dept. — Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lcighj;2b; 3h; 5d; 11 o; 13 d e ; 13 i 
a; 15 c; 16b 1; 18 v; 21 i; 34 ap; 27 f. 

School op Mines. — Course, Engineering. — Degrees, C. E. ; E. M. ; Ph. B ; Met. E. — Requirements, 1 f j ; 2b; 4 
a ; 51; 9 g h ; 10 f g ; 18 p ; 21 e ; 22 g ; 25 1 ; 26 s a ; 39 j ; 31 g ; 33 a c d ; 33 h ; 34 a b. 

School of Political Science. — Course, Political Science. — Degree, A. M. ; Ph. D. — Requirements. Must have 
pursued an undergraduate course at Columbia or its equivalent curriculum — essentially a graduate course. 

School of Library Economy. — Course, Library Science. — Requirements, 1 q n m ; Must present satisfactory cer- 
tificates or diplomas, or satisfy the faculty by personal examination of the applicant's fitness to take the 
course. 

COLUMBIAN UNIVERSITY. 

Literary Dept. — Course, Letters. — Degree, B. L. — Requirements, lgh; 3a; 3x; 5g; 11a; 12c; 13amz; 

14d; 15aorb; korl6b; 16ka; 18 v; 23; 37a; 28 e. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, lgh; 3a; 3x; 5g; 18 v; 23; 27 a; 

28 e. 
♦Classical Dept.— Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lgh; 2a; 3x; 5g; 11a; 12 c; 13 am z; 

14 d; 15 a orb; 16 b or 15 k; ka; 18 v; 23; 27 a; 38 e. 

COOPER UNION. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, M. and D.** — Requirements, lck; 3b; 3x. 
Classical Dept. (Male). — Course, Arts. — Degree, M. and D. — Requirements, lck. 
Classical Dept. (Female). — Course Arts. — Degree, M and D. — Requirements, 1 d 1 m. 

CORNELL COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lcgh; 3ae; 31a; 6e; 111; 13pf; 15; 

16 d ; 17 f ; 18 a ; 31 j ; 33 c ; 24 h ; 35 h k p ; 26 c ; 38 f ; 33 d. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements lchg; 2ae; 31a; 6e; 10 m 

n o : 11 1 ; 12 p f or (15, 16 d, 17 f ;) 18 a ; 23 c ; 24 h. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, lcgh; 3ae; 31a; 6e; lOmno; 11 1; 

12 p f or (15, 16 d, 17 f ;) (39 h 31 d h).+ 

Engineering Dept. — Course, Civil Engineering. — Degree, C. E. — Requirements, lcgh; 3ae; 31a; 6e; 10 
m n o ; 11 1 or (30 d, 33 r, 33 i) ; IS a ; 23 c. 

CORNELL UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, ldg; 3b; 3(lmnporo); ab; 5tfhork 
11 o ; 13 c k 1 ; 13 i a ; 14 d n u ; 15 m ; 16 1 ; 18 a t ; 24 n ; 35 b or n ; j k ; 27 w c ; 30 a b ; 34 f g. 

Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, (3 z, 6 c, 8 h i 1) alt4 ; (9 p c g q 
T)t ; (10 k c g l)* ; 11 o ; 12 c k 1 ; 13 i a ; 14 d n u ; 15 m ; 16 1 ; IS a t ; 24 n ; 25 b or n ; j k ; 27 n c ; 30 
a b ; 34 f g. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Science and Letters. — Degree, B. S. or B. L. — Requirements, ldg; 3b; (32, 6 c, 8 
h— l)alt.t; (9pcgqr)t; (10k eg I)*; 18 a t ; 25 o ; born; jk; 26 c; 28 c; 29 b; 30a b; 31k; a or 
f ; 34 f g. 

Engineering Dept. — Course, Engineering and Architecture. — Degree, C. E. ; M. E. ; E. E. ; B. S. A. — Require- 
ments, ldg; 3b; 4 d ; 5 i ; 6 d ; 18 a t ; 25 o ; born; 25 j k ; 26 c ; 2S c ; 29 b ; 30 a b ; 31 k ; a or f ; 
34 fg. 

DARTMOUTH UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lgh; 2b; 3 x ; 5 i ; 11 o ; (13 m or n or 13 c, 

13 j, 13 c t) or (11 m, 12 c r, 13 a k 1 m o, 14 e) ; 14 d ; (15 c, 16 b k, 17 g) or (15 o, 16 j) ; 21 q ; 24 p j ; 
26 w; 27 mb. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Latin Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, lgh; 2b; 3x; 5i; 9d; (11 o ; (13 

m n or 12 c), 13 j e t. 14 d), or (11 m, 12 c r, (13 a k 1 m o) 14 d) ; 31 q ; 24 p j ; 26 w ; 27 b. 
Chandler Scientific School. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, lg; 2b; 3q; 5i; 18 v; 

31 q ; 25 j k ; 26 w ; 30 h. 

Course, Agriculture and Mech. Arts. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, lg; 2b; 3q; lSv; 24 j; 26 w; 

30 h ; 34 d. 
Thayer School. — Course, Civil Engineering. — Degree, C. E. — Requirements, 3b; 4e; 51; 6h; 7bc; dore; 

8mn; 18 v; 34 j; 35 kq; 36 a; 29 kl; 31 no; 32 k; 33 h. 

DE PAUW UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lcq; 2gm; 3o; 5n; 11 gr; 13ckl; 13s; 

14 a; 18 h; 19 r; 20iw; Slop; 33 c; 15 b; 16 o a; 17 i; 24 v; 26 e ; 39b; 30 a i ; 33 q. 

Course, Literary. — Degree, B. L., L. A. B.— Requirements, lcq; 3gm; 3o; 5n; 11 gr; ISckl; 13 s; 
14 a ; 18 h ; 19 r ; 30 i w ; 31 o p ; 22 c ; 24 v ; 26 e ; (39 b, 30 f, 31 1 d) or (34 h) ; 34 h or 39 h ; 30 f ; 31 1 d. 
Scientific and Philosophical Dept. — Course, Scientific ; Philosophical. — Degree, B. S., Ph. B. — Require- 
ments, lcq;2gm;3o;5n;llgr;12ckl; 13 s; 14 a; 18 h; 19 r; 20 iw; Slop; 22 c; 24 v; 
26 e; 29 b; 30 f; 31 1 d ; 33 q. 

UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. 

Franklin College. — Course, Classical, Scientific, Philosophical. — Degree, A. B., B. S., Ph. B. — Requirements, 
lbh; 2a; 41; 5y; 12 c or equivalent ; 13 c or equivalent ; 15 k ; 21 i ; 23. 

State College. — Course, Engineering, Chemical, Agriculture. — Degree, C. E., Chem., B. Agri. — Requirements, 
lb;2a;41;5y;21i;23. 

HARVARD UNIVERSITY AND (LAWRENCE SCIENTIFIC). 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lg; 3a; 5i; 6dori; 7a; 8cob; 9c; 9J 

x; lOcouy; lOirste; Um; 12tlo; 15 o ; 16 g f ; [17 v, 1 5 0] or [17 w, 15 o] ; 17 x; 18 1; 21 ql 

22 f; 26bco; 27am; 29 o i ; p q; 31 [h 29 a] or 39b c ; v; 36 dn op. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Chemistry, Natural History. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, lg; 3ak; 5i; 8ho; 

9 c or 10 c ; 13 1 ; 18 1 ; 31 q ; 22 f ; (29 a, 31 h) or b or c. 

Course, Engineering, Mathematics, Physics. — Degree, C. E., B. S. — Requirements, lg; 3ak; 5i; 6d 

ori; 8ho; 9 cor 10 c; 12 1; 18 1; 21 q; 22 f ; 29 a; 31 h or bore. 

* In this coarse any 3 of the 4 required branches, viz. : English, Latin, Greek and Mathematics may be offered. 

** Medal and Diploma. 

t May be substituted for Latin Prose composition as called for under 12. 

j The student must offer one of the three alternate groups marked as above. 



jg AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 

HAMILTON COLLEGE, 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 2b; 3 w ; 5 i ; 11 o ; 12 e ; 13 a ; (m n) or i ; u. 

ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 m ; 3 w, b ; 5m; 11 a ord ; o ; 12 c ; 13 p; 

a, s ; r or 13 q to page 196 or eq. in 13 u ; 14 d ; 15 b, k ; b or a ; h ; 16 b ; a ; 17 t; 18 v ; 22 m ; 24 j ; 

26 x; 29 h. 
Literary Dept. — Course, Literary. — Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 2m ; 3 w, b ; j ; 5m; 6f ; 11 a ; 12 c ; 13 p ; 

a ; 13 s ; 18 v ; 23 m ; 24 j ; 26x ; 29 h ; 30 h ; 31 d. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 1 c f ; 2 m ; 3 W, b;5m;lSv;22m; 

24 j ; 26 x ; 29 h ; 32 p. 

INDIANA UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3a-f; 5q; 12 a; 13 q. f; 14 v, w; 19 q ; 

20 x m ; 21 r ; 25 k ; 26 a ; 27 q. u. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 28 i ; 30 d ; 35 f. 

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 n ; 5 r ; 7 d ; 8 a or b ; [9 be, q,] § or 
[10 1, u c]§; 12 c ; 13 a, f , 1 ; 14 d, b ; 16 b,t m,+ j ; IS v ; 19 w q ; 20 k ; 21 i ; 24 j ; [26 r, 1,] or [27 n c] 
29 d ; 30 d ; 31 1, a. 

KANSAS UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a-e ; 5 p ; 9 c, g ; d, e, f ; 11 m ; 12 f ; 

q ; 13 a ; 14 b, m ; 15 b ; 16 x ; 17 i ; 19 d ; 20 g ; h, i : 24 j ; 25 k ; g ; 26 i ; 29 b ; 32 a, o, b. 
Literary Dept. — Course, Literary. — Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a-e ; 5 p ; 9 c, g ; d, e, f ; 11 m ; 

12 f ; q ; 19 d ; 20 g, h, i ; 24 j ; 25 k ; g ; 26 i ; 29 b ; 32 a, o, b. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Latin. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a-e ; 5 p ; 9 c, g ; d, e, f ; 11 m ; 12 f, q ; 

13 a; 14 b, m ; 19 d ; 20 g ; h, i ; 24 j ; 25 k, g ; 26 i ; 29 b ; 32 a, o, b. 

General Dept. — Course, General. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a-e ; 5 p ; 9 c, g ; d, e, f ; 10 b, d, e ; 
c,g; lOd; 20 g ; h, i ; 24 j ; 25 k; g; 26i; 29b; 32a, o, b. 

LAFAYETTE COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 g, a ; 5 q or 2 v ; 11 1 ; 11 ; 12 c ; 13 a, 

h. s ; 14 f ; 15 h ; 15 ; 16 b, y or 1 ; 18 x ; v ; 20 m, g ; 24 j, p ; 27 d, s, v. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Latin. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2b ; 3 g, a ; 5 q or w ; 11 t ; 12 c ; 13 a, h, s : 

14 f ; 15 h ; 18 x ; v ; 20 m g ; 24 j, p ; 27 d, s, v ; 2 g, h. 

General Dept.— Course, General. — Degree, B. S.— Requirements, 2 b ; 3 g, a ; 5 q or w ; 18 v ; x ; 20 m, g ; 24 j; 

28 i ; 29 h. 
Engineering Dept.— Course, Civil or Mining. — Degree, C. E., E. M. — Requirements, 3a; 14 e; 5 x ; IS v ; x ; 

20 mg. 

LEHIGH UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 a, d ; 2 b ; 3 1 ; a-e ; 5e ; 11 a, o ; 12 c, k, 1, e p ; 

13 h, a ; 14 n ; 15 b n ; 16 b, 1. c, i ; IS v ; 21 i ; 22 e ; 23 ; 24 j ; 25 j, k ; 26 n ; 27 c, n. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, la, d ; 2b; 31; a-e ; 5 e ; 11 a, o ; 12 c, 

k, 1, e p ; 13 h, a ; 18 v ; 21 i ; 22 e ; 23 ; 24 j ; 25 j, k ; 26 n ; 27 c. 
Engineering Dept.— Course, Engineering.— Degree, C. E.; M. E.;E. M.; E. E.; A. C. — Requirements, 1 a, d', 

2b; 3 1, a-e ; 5 e ; 18 v ; 21 i ; 22 e ; 23 ; 24 j ; 25 j ; 26 n ; 29 a. 

MASS. INST. OF TECHNOLOGY. 

Scientific Dept.— Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 1 e, t ; 2 g or i or s ; 3a; 4 j or k ; 5 t, j 
or n ; 9 c, d ; 18 v, x ; 21 k ; 24 j ; 26 x or y or 27 1 ; 35 h ; (10 t). 

MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2b; 31, a-f ; 6a; 11 a or d ; 12 c ; 13 s or q or r ; 

g or (12 a, i, j or 14 e i, or 15 k) ; 14 d ; 15 a or b ; h ; 16 a or r ; c ; 18 t ; 19 b ; 20 i, d ; 22 c, d ; 24 k, 

1, m ; 25 k, j ; 26 b, o, r, c ; 27 m ; x. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 9 w, h, c ; 10 c, f ; 11 k or 13 p ; 12 c ; 14 z ; 

26borc; 28 j ; 29aorb; 30 j ; o*;a*; n*; 31 p, k*; 35 c, j, k ; n. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 27 s. 
Literary Dept. — Course, Literary. — Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 21 k; 25 j ; 26 n. 

MINNESOTA UNIVERSITY. 

Chemical Dept. — Course, Chemical and all other courses.— Degree, A. B. ; B. S. ; B. L.; C. E. ; M. E. ; E. E.; 

B. Archt. — Requirements, 2 m, f, g, 1 ; 3 m, o, 1 ; 4 d ; 5 i, o, n ; 11 a or d ; 12 b ; 14 k ; IS It, x ; 19 a ; 

20a; 25n; 26 g, h or d; 27r; 30 a; 35 y [25 d, 29 a or 35 b, 26p]; z. 
Agricultural Dept. — Course, Agriculture. — Degree, B. Agri. — Requirements, 2 m, f, g, e ; IS m, v, x ; 24 j, d, 

h ; 26 d ; 28 r. 

MISSOURI STATE UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Latin Language and Literature. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 11 c, u, o, p ; 12 a, t : 

13 a ; 14 d, q ; 24 p, w ; 27 1, i, x. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Greek ditto. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 15 a ; 16 e, a, b ; 24 w. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Agriculture and Mech. Arts. — Degree, B. A. S. — Requirements, 2a; IS v ; 24 j. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Technical. — Degree, E. M., C. E. — Requirements, 2a; 3 a ;. 5 i ; 18 v, n ; 22 c ; 25 e ; 

26 a ; 29 h ; 31 1 ; 32 a, b. 



§ Either may be offered tn lieu of Xenophon. 

t An Equivalent of Fr. or Ger. may be offered in place of Greek. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 19 

NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2d o; 3 jm; 11a; 12 a; 13 p, g ; 14 q, s, t; 

15 b, 1 ; [16 s, 17 q] 16 u, w ; [16 r, 17 r], 16 o ; 17 1 ; 18 z, f, x ; 24 g ; 25 a ; 26 k ; 27 g, r, s ; 33 d. 
Engineering Dept. — Course, Civil and Mechanical. — Degree, C. E. ; M. E. — Requirements, 2a; 3a; 5i; 18 v ; 

23 ; 26 k, n ; 27 q ; 29 h ; 30 f , n ; 31 1 ; 32 a, c ; 33 c, d, x. 

OBERLIN COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 2 b; 3 k; 4 j ; 60; lid; 12 a; 13 a, m or 
141; s; c; 18 b, m; 19 x, y, n; 20 n; 2a m; 25 i ; 26 e; 27 r, s ; 29 n; 30 m. 

Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical.— Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 2b; 3k; 4 3 ; 5 3 ; 9 c, x ; 11 d ; 
12a; 13 s; 14 c; 18 v, m ; 19*-, y, n; 20 n; 22 m; 25 i, k; 26 e; t; 27 r; 281; 29 n ; 30 m; 31 d. 

Literary Dept. — Course, Literary. — Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 2b; 3k; 4 j ; 9 c, x ; 11 d ; 12 a, p ; 13 s ; 
14 c; 18 v, m; 19 x, y, n; 20 n; 22m; 34 3; 25 i, k ; 26 e, t ; 27 r ; 281; 29 n; 30 n; 31 d; 33 y. 

OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY. 

Preparatory Dept. — Requirements, 1 z ; 2a; 3 q ; 11 r ; 18 v ; 23 ; 24 j ; 33 z. 

PENNSYLVANIA COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 2b; 3 m, r or 4 f ; 5 u ; 11 ; 12 b ; 13 d ; 14 a ; 

15; 16 b; 17 g; 18 v; 23; 24 j. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2 b; (3 m r or4f); 5u; 11; 12 b; 13 di 

14 a; 18 v; 23; 24 3". 

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 1 ; 2 a ; 3 a ; 5 i ; 11 ; 12 c ; 13 a r ; 14 d ; 15 ; 

16 x, b, 1 ; 18 a, d, i, k ; 20 1 k y ; 21 p ; 26 g or c ; 27 j. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 1 t ; 2a; 3a; 5 p ; 18 a, d, i, k ; 19 e. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 20 k 1 y ; 21 p ; 26 g or r c ; 27 j ; 
35 f (12 b, 13 d w) (9 h v) (10 r s). 

PURDUE UNIVERSITY. 

Agricultural Dept. — Course, Agriculture, — Degree, B. S., B. M. E. — Requirements, lgdh;2nb;30ab; 
18 v b c ; 21 r ; 24 j ; 26 m ; 34 n. 

Engineering Dept. — Course, Mechanical Engineering. — Degree, B. C. E. — Requirements, same as for Agricul- 
tural Course. 

Engineering Dept. — Course, Civil Engineering.— Degree, B. C. E. — Requirements, same as for Agricultural 
Course. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Science. — Requirements, same as for Agricultural Course. 

Industrial Art Dept. — Course, Arts. — Requirements, same as for Agricultural Course 

RENNSELAER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE. 

Engineering Dept. — Course, Engineering. — Degree, C. E. — Requirements, ldgh;2b;3w; 5f;18r;23;24 

j ; 34 c. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific — Degree, B. S.- — Requirements, same as for Engineering Course. 

UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 g h; 2 b ; 3 x ; 5 p ; 11 r ; d or 11 a ; 12 e; 

13 s, a ; 14 d m i ; 15 b n ; 16 x, a, c, 1 ; 20 1, u. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Science — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 1 g h • 2 b ■ 3 x ; 5 p ; 11 r, d or 11 a ; 12 c ; 

13 s a ; 14 d m i ; 20 1 u. 

RUTGERS COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2b;3oab;5s;llaordore;om;12ct; 
13 s or r ; a ; 14 f, i, m, y, w, 15 a or b ; c, t, d ; 16 c, or equivalent of 15 k ; (16 a or 17 b) ; 16 1 g ; 17 1 or a 
c ; m e ; IS v ; 19 b u ; 20 a o p ; 23 ; 24, y, 3 ; 25 r ; 26 1, b, h ; 27 z, m ; 32 m ; 35 t [12 a, 13 m]. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree,'B. S. — Requirements, 1 d g ; 2 b ; 3 o or r or g ; 5 i ; 18 v ; 19 b u ; 20, o, 
a, p ; 23 ; 24 j ; 25 k ; 26 1, b, h ; 29 j or n ; 31 r s or t. 

UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH. 

Classical Dept. — All Courses. — Degree, A. B. B. S. ; B. L. T. C. E. — Requirements, lg;2pqk;4g;5f;9a, 
n, ; 10 b, y ; 11 j e ; 12 v ; 14 p ; 15 b ; 16 x a ; 17 e, i, j, b ; 18 a, b, c ; 20 n ; 21 s ; 22 c ; 24 k ; 25 c ; 27 e, 
n ; 28 h, g, 33 i. 

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Classical and all other.— Degree, A. B. ; C. E. ; E. M. ; M. E. ; LL. B.— Require- 
ments, 1 c, h ; 2 b ; 3 q ; 11 q ; 12c ; 13 a ; q ; 15 1 ; 16 b ; 17 f ; 18 m, v ; 23 ; 24 j ; 26 h j ; 27 q ; 2S c, 
24p;f. 

STEVENS' INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY. 

Engineering Dept. — Course, Mechanical Engineering. — Degree, M. E. — Requirements, 1 e ; 2 a, w ; 3 a, f, g, k ; 
6 n ; 8 g ; IS v, s ; 20 z ; 22 1 ; 24 3 ; 26 1 or b, or d ; 29 1, s, 33 w. 

SWARTHMORE COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Classical and all others.— Degree, A. B. ; B. L. ; B. S.— Requirements, 1 x ; 2b; 3 w ; 
5 i ; 9 n, e, g ; 10 c, g ; 18 s v ; 24 p 3" ; 25 3, k ; 26 x, t ; 27 s ; 35 i ; [12 c ; 13 a, 14 x ; 24 n ; 27 w, h]. 

SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY. 

Architectural Dept.— Course, Architecture.— Degree, B. Arch.— Requirements, 2b; 3b; 5i; 18 v; 24 3; 26 w; 

29 h ; 32 j. 
Arts Dept.— Course, Painting and Music— Degree. B. P. B. M.— Requirements, 2 b, 18 v ; 24 3" ; 26 w ; 29 h ; 31, 

a, c, 3, o. 



20 AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 

UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE. 

Agricultural Dept. — Course, Agriculture. — Degree, B. Agr. — Requirements, 1 h, b, u ; Elements of Agricul- 
ture ; 2 r ; 3 a ; 5 i ; 11 a ; 15 a ; IS m, x ; 26 x ; 28 a ; 34 o. 

Engineering Dept. — Course, Science. — Degree, B. S. 

Chemical Dept. — Course, Applied Chemistry. — Degree, B. S. E., B. S. Ac. — Requirements, same as for Agricul- 
tural Course. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, same as for Agricultural Course. 

Scientific Dept. — Course, Latin — Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, same as for Agricultural Course. 

TRINITY COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a-f ; 5 i ; 11, o ; 12 c ; r, k, 1, m, o ; 13 a, 

14 e 15 a or b ; c ; 16 b, 1 ; a or x, 18 s ; 21 q ; 23 f ; 24 p ; 27 s, c, w. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Letters and Science. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2 b; 3 a-f ; 4i; 5i; 6d; 8h; 

Ho; 12 e or b and 13 d ; 13 w ; 14 e ; 18 s, y ; 21 q ; 22 f ; 24 p ; 26 a ; 27 s, c, tv. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Letters. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a-f ; 5 i ; 11 o ; 12 c ; r, k, 1, m, o ; 13 a ; 

14 e ; 18 s ; 21 q ; 22 f ; 24 p ; 27 s, c, tv. 

UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY. 

Military Dept. — Course, Military. — No degree.— Requirements, 2a; 18 v; 21 y ; 22 f • 23 ; 24 j ; 26 w. 

UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY. 

Naval Dept. — Course, Naval. — No degree. — Requirements, 1 w, v, 2 b ; 3 q ; 18 v ; 24 j ; 26 a ; 36 q. 

VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 g, d, 2 b ; 3 a-f ; 11 d or e or a ; k ; r ; 12 c ; 

k or 1 ; 13 c ; 14 b ; 15 o ; 16 b, k ; 17 f ; 18 d, e ; 19 d, f ; 20 a ; 21 w ; 24 c ; 26 e. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 1 g, d ; 2 b ; 3 a-f ; 11 d or e or a ; k ; r ; 12 c ; 

k or 1 ; 13 c ; 14 b : 15 o ; 16 b, k ; 17 f ; IS d ; e ; 19 d, f ; 20 a ; 21 -sv ; 24c ; 26 e; 
Engineering Dept. — Course, Engineering.— Degree, C. E. or B. E. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a-f, k ; 5 e ; 6 m ; 

10 f ; 18 d, e ; 19 d, f ; 21 w ; 24 c ; 23 q ; 35 s. 

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Classical and all others. — Degree, A. B. ; B. S. ; B. L. ; Ph. B. — Requirements, 1 r ; 2 a ; 
3 a ; 5 i ; 12 a ; 14 b ; 15 1 ; 16 d. 

WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 1 d, g, t; 2a; 3w; 6j; 9 n, c ; 12 c; 13 a; 

14 f ; [15 b, k] ; or [19 b, 1] ; 18 v, x ; 23 ; 26 a, t ; 27 1 ; 35 n, [10 a, c]. 
Engineering Dept.— Course, Engineering. — Degree, C E. D. E. Chem. ; E. M. B. S. — Requirements, 1 d g, t, 

2a; 3w; 6j; 9x*; 10 u*; 18 v, x: 23; 25 k; 26 a, t ; 29 h, 32 j ; 1; 35 o [111, 12 b]*. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 2a;3w;6j;9n, c;12c;13a; 

14 f ; 18 v, x ; 26 a, t ; 27 1 ; 29 h ; 35 [10 a, c]. 

WESTERN UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Scientific and Engineering. — Degree, A. B. Ph. B. C. E. — Requirements, lc; 2b; 
3 x ; 5 f ; 11 d ; 12 b ; 13 a, v ; 14 c ; 15 b, q ; 16 c ; x ; 18 a, s ; 27 c, n, v ; 30 n, a ; 31 a. 

WILLIAMS' COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a, b ; 5 i ; 11 d, or a ; r ; 12 c, p, t ; 13 e, h ; 14 f, 15 e 
or b ; h ; 16 b, g, j, k ; 21 q, v ; 24 j, p ; 27 d, m ; 35 p. 

WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, A. B. B. S. — Requirements, 2a; 3a; 5 i ; 6 d ; 10 a, u ; 11 a ; 
12 c ; 13 a, m ; 14 d ; 15 a ; 16 c, k ; 17 f ; 18, v, m ; 20 b ; 25 t, k ; 26 a, t ; 27 q ; 29 a ; 30 h ; 31 d. 

WOOSTER UNIVERSITY. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 2m; 3 j ; 5 m, n ; 11 d ; 12 c or 14 q ; 13 c, s ; 

14 b, or 13 n ; 15 e ; 17 n ; 18 m, n, v ; 20 q ; 25 d ; 26 m, r ; 28 c ; 30 e ; 31 a. 
Philosophical Dept. — Course, Philosophical or Literary. — Degree, Ph. B., Lit. B. — Requirements, same as 

Classical, with the addition of 10 w. 

WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE. 

Scientific Dept.— Course, Scientific— .Degree, B. S. — Requirements, Id; 2a; 31orv; x; 5i; 9 a or d ; 18 v; 
19 r; 20 a; 21 z; 24 j ; 28 o; 33 v. 

YALE COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 c, i ; 2b; 3 r, y ; 5 i ; 9 c or 10 c ; 11 o, c, m> 
t, r ; 13 n, a ; 14 e ; r & g or h, j or i ; 15 c ; 16 a, b, 1, i. j, x ; 17 u ; 27 d, q. 

SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL (YALE COLLEGE). 

Chemistry Dept. — Course, Chemistry. — Degree, Ph. B. — Requirements, 1 c, g, i ; 2b; 3 a-f ; w, k, i, s ; 6 a, b ; 

8 f ; 12 e, p ; 13 x ; 18 a, t ; 21 i ; 23 ; 24 j ; 26 x ; 34 p ; 35 x ; 36 c. 
Scientific Dept. — Course, Post Graduate. — Degree, C. E., M. E., D. E. — Requirements, must be a graduate of 

a recognized college. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 21 



Table No. 3. 

Requirements of Admission to Courses of Study for which a Degree is 
Conferred upon Young Women only. 



Reference Table A contains a complete key to both figures and letters referred to under the gene- 
ral head of Requirements. Figures generally represent the subject matter, and the letters both the 
text-book recommended or preferred and the amount of preparation required. 

The explanatory notes of Table No. 2 apply equally to this table. 



COLUMBIA COLLEGE (COLLEGIATE COURSE FOR YOUNG WOMEN). 

Classical Dept. — Course, English Language and Literature. — Degree, A. B.— Requirements, le; 2b; IS v ; 

20 a ; 24 a, q, r ; 26 f. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Latin Language and Literature. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 e ; 2b ; 11 u, p; 

12 c, e, s ; 13 a ; 14 i ; 18 v ; 20 a ; 24 a, q r ; 26 f. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Greek Language and Literature.— Degree, A. B. — 1 e ; 2b; 15 e ; 16 b, 1 ; 17 f ; 18 v ; 

20 a ; 24 a, q, r ; 26 f. 
Classical Dept.— Course, Modern Languages.— Degree, A. B.— 1 e ; 2b; lOik; g; 11 h, i, o ; IS v ; 20 a; 24 

a, q, r ; 26 f ; 33 k, o. 
Mathematical Dept. — Course, Mathematics.— Degree, A. B.— 1 e ; 2 b ; 3 h ; 5 d ; 18 v ; 20 a ; 24 a, q, r ; 26 f. 

ELMIRA COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Classical and Scientific— Degree, A. B , B. S.— Requirements, 2b; 3a; 5s; 11 o, r ; 

12 a; 13 a, i, m, s; 14 d, i, m; 15 b, v; 16 a, c, k ; IS v; 19 n; 21 w, z; 22 m; 23 f ; 21 p, j ; 25 t, x ; 35 e 
[9J v or u ; o, d ; 9 g ; 94. p, b, w] or [104i ; p, n, o, q, 10s, y, c] 

MILL'S COLLEGE AND SEMINARY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a, e; 5i; 12 cor 13 m; 13 a, q, s, u; 

14 f ; 16 a, b, 1 ; 18 v ; 19 d ; 20 j ; 23 e. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Belles Lettres.— Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 2 b ; 3 a, e; 5 i; 9, 10; 13 a, q, s, u ; 

14 f; lSv; 19 d; 20 j ; 23 e; 12 c or 13 m. 

MILWAUKEE COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, lg; 2a; lid; 12 c; 13 s; IS y, b, c, n ; 23; 
24 j ; 26 g ; 37 a ; 30 v ; 31 u ; 33 f. j. 

MT. HOLYOKE FEMALE SEMINARY. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B.— Requirements, 1 d, 2 b ; 3 t ; 5 r, i ; 4 h ; 91. o or 10 b or 104 n ; 
f9i s, t, n, pi or [104 i or 9 b, n, o, k] ; 1 1 o, t, q ; 12 c ; 13 a, q, r, s or o, u ; 14 f ; 15 a ; 16 a, c, 1 ; IS k, o ; 
19 y ; 20 s ; 22 f ; 23 d ; 25 1, i ; 26 a ; 27 r, s ; 28 1 ; 29 h ; 30 h ; 31 d ; 26 x. 

ONTARIO LADIES' COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept.— Course, Arts.— Degree, M. L. A.— Requirements, a a ; 9 d ; 10 b ; 14 e ; 18 v ; 24 j ; 26 v ; 33 h ; 

ROCKFORD SEMINARY. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2a; 3a; o; 5q; 11 v, w, p, r; 12c; 13s; 

14 c ; 18 v ; 22 c or 1 ; 25 s, t ; 26 x ; 27 q ; 36 a, b or [15 a or b ; 16 a, c] or [10 x, k, s, y ; 104. e, a, h] or [94. 

1, b, m, n ; 9 q.] 

SMITH COLLEGE* 
Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 g, d ; 2 b ; 3 a, e ; 5 i ; 11 a ; 13 s ; m or 14 b ; 

a; 14 f; 15 b; 16 b, 1, a; 18 v ; 19 a; 20 oo; 22m; 23 b, c ; 27 m, b. 
Literary Dept. — Course, Literary. — Degree, B. L. — Requirements, 21; 3 a, e ; 5 i ; [94. a, 1, 9q] or [10 k or m, s, 1 ; 

o and 104 c] or [ lo| d and 10 y] ; [11a; 13 s, a, m or 14 b, f , 27 b] or [15 b ; 16 a, b, 1, 27 in] and see 94. ; 22 n. 
+ Scientific Dept. — Course, Scientific — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 21; 3 a-e ; 5i; 11a; 13 s, a, m or 14 b ; 

14 f ; 27 b ; 29 h ; 30 c ; 31 d. 

VASSAR COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts.— Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 d, g ; 2 b ; 3 a, 1 ; 5 n or r ; 11 s ; 12 c, k, 1, o ; 

13 v or s ; a, i ; 14 d ; 19 d, w ; 20 m ; 23 f ; 24 j ; 26 x ; 27 b, v ; 28 t ; 34 f ; 36 a [17 g ; 16 x, b, 1] or 
[10 c, r, e, o, y ; 104. e, f , g] or [9 c, x ; 9| j, k]. 

WESLESLEY COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 1 d, g, h ; 2b; 3 a, e ; 5 r, n, o, z ; 11 o ; 12 c ; 

13 s or r, u, q ; a [13 b, 16 x] ; 14 f ; [15 a, 16 p] ; 16 a, c, 1 ; 18 v, m, q ; 21 v, q ; 22 d, o, 1 ; 24 j, p ; 25 1 ; 

26 a ; 27 r, s ; 28 u. 
Sciencitip Dept. — Course, Scientific. — Degree, B. S. — Requirements, 1 d, g, h ; 2b; 3 a, e ; 5 r, n, o, q ; 11 o ; 

12 c ; 13 s or r, u, q ; a, (13 b, 16 x) ; 14 f ; [15 a, 16 p] ; 16 a, c, 1 ; 18 v, m, q ; 21 v, q ; 23 d, o, 1 ; 24 j, p ; 
25 1 ; 26 a ; 27 r, s ; 28 u ; 35 e [9J b, o, p, d, q ; 9 q, w ; 94 r] or 104 e, i, 1. 

Musical Dept. — Course, Musical. — Degree, Mus. B. — Requirements, 3b; 3 a. e ; 5 r, n, o, z ; 9t ; 11 o ; 12 c ; 

13 s or r, u, q ; a ; 14 f ; 20 b ; 21 v, q ; 36 x, r ; 27 r, s. 

(CINCINNATI) WESLEYAN COLLEGE. 

Classical Dept. — Course, Classical and Scientific. — Degree, A.R, B. S. — Requirements, 1 c, g, r; 2a; 3x; 
11 a, f ; 13 p ; IS v ; 24 j ; 25 k ; 28 f. 

WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE. 
Classical Dept. — Course, Arts. — Degree, A. B. — Requirements, 2 a; 13 x ; 18 v; 23 g; 24 j; 28 1, k. 



* Admisaiou to Special Course same as admission to Classical Course. French or German as in Literary Course (35 f) (35 e) (7 O. 
t Scientific Course, French and German, same as Literary Course. 
J French and German may be substituted for Latin. 



2 2 AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 

Table No. 4. 

COST OF TUITION ; MATRICULATION, GRADUATION AND OTHER FEES ; BOARD AND LODGING, 
AND APPROXIMATE TOTAL COST PER ANNUM OF ALL COLLEGES IN THIS LIST. 

Explanation. — The letters of reference herein used will be found to refer generally to the nature of the Special 
Fees and for what they are to be paid, and as some of them are optional, while others are obligatory, it 
has been th6ught best not to include them in the column of the total cost. The letters of reference may 
be found in Table B. 



NAME OP COLLEGE. 


Tuition, 

per Annum. 


Matricula- 
tion 
Fee. 


Gradua- 
tion 
Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Board 

and 

Lodging. 


Total Cost 

per 

Annum. 




Free or 
§40 (s) 






$14 (1) 

10 (L) 


$3(D) 
10-15 (T) 
10-15 (T) 


$142 










$142-$1S2 




50 






142 


201 














Free 
$12-$90 

60 

40 


$5 
Free-S5 




$5(D) 

3-5 (D) 


$15 (I) 
15(1) 
7.50 (I) 
10-12 (T) 


$108-$127 
108- 127 
108- 127 
108- 127 


S108-$127 




120- 217 




168- 187 








3(D) 


148- 167 












$100 






$5(D) 


$5(1) 
10 (L) 


$145-$253 


$244-$353 


























$36 






$8-$15 (T) 


$5.25 (I) 
1.50(G) 


$107-$225 


$143-$261 












8 










115- 233 


















$100 
200-300 
80 
50 


$5 
3 


$5 


$20-S25 (T) 
10(D) 
3(D) 


$10 (I) 


$144-$270 


$244-$370 




344- 570 




30 (L) 


157- 293 


200- 350 






10 






5 


5(P) 


10(F) 


195- 273 












$75 


$5 


$25 






$168-$216 


$243-$291 




$10 (1) 


$5(L) 






7S 
























Brooklyn Collegiate and 


$80-$160 










( 




















$100 


$5 




$1S.25(L) 




$190-$318 


$290-$418 








Btjchtel College 


$40 






$1(1) 


$5(D) 


$162-$194 


$202-$234 




45 75 


























$36 






$14 (1) 


5(D) 


$175 


$211 










Cincinnati University , 


$75 


$5 


$25 


$5 (D) 
25(0) 


$8-$15 (L) 
7(P) 


SU7-$234 


$192-$309 








City of N. Y. University. 


$140 


$5 


$30 


$10 (D) 


$10 (L) 


E. N. S. 


$155 


College op City of N. T.. 


E. N S. 










E. N. S. 


E. N. S. 














College op New Jersey 
(Princeton University) 


$140 • 






$15-$25 (T) 


$18 (L) 


$163-$535 


$303-$675 










Free 


85-S10 (s) 




$1 (u) 


S15 (S I) 


?146-$234 


$146-$234 


CriT.TmrRTi CnT.T.HGin 


Free (H) $150 
" " 200 


S5-S10 
5- 10 


$15 


S8-S15 (t) 
15-50 (T) 
30-60 (L) 


$5-25 (I) 


$254-8390 
254- 390 


S254-$540 




254- 590 






" "Law 


.$100-150 
150 


5 
5 

5 

5 


25 




254- 390 
254- 390 


354- 540 


" " Political Science. 






404-540 


Collegiate Course 






5(E) 


254- 390 


School of Physicians and 
Surgeons 


(160 

(175 

50 


30 




254- 390 
254-390 


I 419- 464 


School of Library Economy 




5(1) 


1 555- 600 
304- 440 


I 





AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 
Table No. 4. — Continued. 



23 



NAME OF COLLEGE. 


Tuition, 
per Annum. 


Matricula- 
tion 
Fee. 


Gradua- 
tion 
Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Board 

and 

Lodging. 


Total Cost 

per 

Annum. 




$50 
80 
25 

100 
90 


$10 










$300 






$2(D) 








P. G. Law 












Medical Dept 


5 




10(A) 

$10-825 (L) 








Corcoran Scientific School . 




















Coopeb Union 


Free 






























$33-$36 
12 
15 
15 
15- 24 




$5 


$6-$15 (t) 


$18 (I) 


$103-$120 


$136-$156 






115- 132 














118- 135 














118- 135 














118- 144 
















Cornell University 


$75 




$5 


$25 (t) 




$200 


$275 










Dartmouth College 

Agricultural and Mechanics 


$90 
Free to ($30 s) 
77 


$5 




$3(l) 


$6(U) 
3-12 (T) 


$128-$187 


$218-$277 
218- 277 


Medical Dept 




$25 












• 








De Pauw University 


E. N. S. 
$40 
8-35 
36-40 










$137-$156 
137- 156 
137- 156 
137- 156 






$10 


$5 


$8(L) 
.50(u) 












Fine Art Dept 




















TCi.mtp.4 C.nT.T.nr™ 














$300 




































Free 
tt 

$100 










$144-$189 
144- 189 
144- 189 








$25 (L) 
37 (t) 
5(U) 








$10 




$2(1) 
6(D) 


$244-$289 












H4MTT.Tni» nm.T/isram 


$75 










S151-$257 


$226-$332 














Harvard College 


$100 
150 






$10-$30 (L) 
20- 25 (T) 




$197-$477 


$297-$577 










347- 627 














Illinois, University or 


Free 


$10 


$5 


$7.50 (I) 


$50-$12 (L) 


$124-$221 


$124-$221 




Free 






$5(B) 
1-$4(L) 


$1(U) 


$117-S137 


$117-$137 


















Johns Hopkin's University. 


$125 




$5-$10 


$5(R) 




















Free 

$25 




$5 


$10 (B) 
15 (T) 


$3-$5 (L) 


$170 


$170 








Fine Art Dept 






$195 


Law " 


$25 












Music " 


10-18 










$180-$1S8 
















Lafayette College 


$81-$111 


$10 




$5(R) 
20 (T) 
8(1) 


$2(G) 
2(U) 


$149.50 


$330.50-S260.50 




























Lehigh University. 


Free 






$25-$50 (T) 




$225-$340 


$225-8340 












Massachusetts Institute 
of Technology 


$200 

Free 
150 






$25-$35 (T) 
5(1) 




$234-$312 

234- 312 
234- 312 


$434-8512 


Lowell School Practical 








234- 312 










384- 462 















24 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 
Table No. 4.— Continued. 



NAME OF COLLEGE. 


Tuition, 
per Annum. 


Matricula- 
tion 
Fee. 


Gradua- 
tion 
Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Board 

and 

Lodging. 


Tota C088 

per 

Annum. 


Michigan, University of.. 


E. N. S. 


$10-825 (S) 
10- 25 (S) 




S10-S30 (1) 
25- 35 (i) 


$10 (D) 
10(D) 


$117-$195 
117- 195 














Mtt.t.s nnT.T.Ei™. , 








$10 (I) 






$525 






























$350 




















Free 






$5(1) 




$200-$275 


$200-$275 












Missouri State University 


$20 
40 






$5(D) 

5(D) 




$90-$180 
90- 180 


$110-8200 


Law and Engineering Dept 








130- 220 












Mount Holyoke Seminary 














$175 


















Notre Dame, University of 




$5 


$5-S10 








$300 
















$9 

$300-8350 






$21 (I) 


82-85 (T) 


$S4-S180 


8 93-8189 


Music Dept 






384- 530 
















Ohio State University 


Free 






$5-$15 (I) 


$50-$10 (L) 


S114-$186 


$114-8186 










Ontario Ladies' College . . 


824 

10 
$5-330 






$3(1) 
2(G) 


$75 (U) 


$136 

130 
136 


$160 








$146 










$141-$166 












Pennsylvania College .... 


$50 




$5 


$5(L) 


$1(G) 


$65-$117 


$147-8199 








Pennsylvania, University 


$150 

200 

30 

150 

80 

25 




$20 


$20 (L) 


$10-$50 (T) 


$150-8210 


$260-8460 


Towne Scientific School . . 




260- 460 














260- 460 




$5 
5 




$10 (C) 






260- 460 


Law Dept 






260- 460 


P. G. Law Dept 










260- 460 
















Purdue University 


Free 


$5 




$2-$5 (L u) 
$5(C) 


$3(1) 


$116.50 


$116.50 


Rensselaer Polytechnic 


$200 




$18 


$15 (c) 


$15-$35 (I) 


$300-$500 


$500-8700 










$75 










$137-$195 


$212-8270 




























$300 


Music and Painting Dept. . 


$20-$72 


























Rutgers' College 


$75 


$5 


$7.50 


$8(1) 
15 (L) 


$2(U) 


$156-$273 


8231-$348 








S100 

$10-$100 

20- 50 










$270 
270 
270 


$370 












8280-8370 












290- 320 . 
















$100 


$10 




$45(1) 
40 (B) 


$5(G) 


$212.50 


8312.50 


South CiRnT.TNA nnt.T.u.ni 


$40 






$10 (T) 
5(L) 


$10 (I) 

$l-$5 (D) 


$120-$138 


8160-8178 











AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 
Table No. 4.— Continued. 



25 



NAME OF COLLEGE. 


Tuition, 
per Annum. 


Matricula- 
tion 
Fee. 


Gradua- 
tion 
Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Special Fee. 


Board 

and 

Lodging. 


Total Cost 

per 

Annum. 


Stevens' Institute of 
Technology 


$150-8225 (S) 






$5 (l) 


$75 (L) 




$500-$600 




















$10 (L) 






$450 


















$30- §60 
50- 100 


$5 


$20 
20 






$146-$195 
146- 195 


$176-$255 








190- 295 














$40 






$28(1) 
$l(u) 
6.50(D) 


$3-$8 (T) 
10(E) 


$133-$136 


$173-8176 


























sioo 






$30(1) 


$15 (L) 


$204-$260 


$304-8360 










United States Military 


Free 






$100 (I) 




















United States Natal 


Free 






$173 (I) 


$20 (T) 


- 












Vanderbilt University 


850 

50 

100 


$10 
10 




85 (u) 

5(D) 

5(D) 
5(E) 


85(B) 

18 (T) 


$108-8180 

108- 180 
108- 180 
108- 180 


$158-4230 
158- 230 










208- 280 




























$400 




8100 


























Virginia, University of 


$75 

100 

80 


$25 
25 
25 


$5 


$10 (B) 

15(D) 
15(D) 




8238 
238 


8313 


$7(1) 
7(1) 


338 




318 








Washington University. . . 


S100 
Free-$50 
$10- 80 
80 


$5 




$10-$20 (T) 


S10-$25 (I) 


$200-8300 
200- 300 


S300-8400 
200- 350 












200- 300 210- 380 












200- 300 


280- 380 
















$100 
36-$90 
15-100 










8200 
200 
200 


$300 












$236-$290 












215- 300 














Wesleyan College (Cin- 






$10 








$176-$206 


Music Dept 


$100-$120 








$150-$180 


250- 300 














Wesleyan Female Coll . . . 






$10 








8250-8304 
















Western University of 


$80 




$5 


$20 (L) 


$10 (B) 


$180 


8260 








WTT.T.T4MS CnT.T.ISGTS 


$105 


$10-$30 




$450 (D) 


$3(G) 


$149-8350 


$254-8455 






Wisconsin, University of. 


Free-$18 (s) 
Free- 18 (s) 




$3 


$10 (I) 
3(D) 


$5-830 (L) 


8175 


$175-8193 




$75 


175- 193 










Wooster, University of. . . 


$45 




$5 


$21-$29 (I) 




$335-8470 


$380-8525 










Worcester Polytechnic 


Free(w)$150 






$8-$40 (L) 


$5-$30 (i) 


$175 


$175-8325 










Yale University 


$150 
10S • 
100 
150 
100 






$10 $50 (T) 


$8-8200 (I) 
5(D 
10(1) 
5-70 (L) 


$182-8500 
182- 500 
182- 500 
182- 500 


8332-8650 








290- 608 








5(D) 
5(D) 


282- 600 


Sheffield Scientific School . . 




$5-810 


332- 650 


p Q 11 a f< 




282- 600 

















26 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



Reference Table A. 



Key and Complete Explanation of all the References found Recorded in Table 

No. 2 and Table No. 3. 

Note. — Wherever more than one Text Book is referred to it indicates that the student has the option of pre- 
paring himself on the amount of work required in any one of the authors cited. Where more than one letter of 
reference is used, all the letters are to be taken inseparably, unless separated by the conjunction or ; in that case 
each subject mentioned becomes optional as to the others ; one however must be offered for examination. 



1. GENERAL REQUIREMENTS. 

Application for admission must be made to President, from whom all necessary information 

may be obtained. 
All candidates must be at least 14 years of age. 
" " " 15 " " 

(( it ( a Ig tt tt 

it tt ' << 17 tt (( 

tt it a tt 1§ << tt 

Every applicant must present testimonials of a good moral character. 

Certificate of honorable dismissal if from a chartered institution of learning. 

Applicant may take part of the entrance examination in one year and the balance in the ensuing 
year. 

All candidates must be examined ; certificates not received in place of examinations. 

Application for admission may be made by mail as well as in person. 

Not over 35 years old. 

A responsible reference as to character required (see g). 

All graduates of literary colleges are admitted without examination. 

Not less than 20 years of age. 

Those who wish to be exempt from matriculation examinations must submit a satisfactory certifi- 
cate of proficiency in the studies from which they wish to be exempt. 

Candidates who present certificates from the N. Y. State Board of Regents are exempt from ex- 
amination in the studies certified to. 

Applicant must possess such a knowledge of arithmetic, grammar, geography and history as would 
be required of a graduate of a Public School, not a High School or Academy. 

Deficiency in any one of these subjects will be sufficient to insure the rejection of a candidate. 

Must be between the ages of 14 and 18 years. 

Applicants for admission to Scientific Course will not be rejected on account of deficiencies in 
Latin, French or German, but will be permitted to make them up after admission. 

Applicants must know how to read and write. 



2. ARITHMETIC. 



a. Without Metric System. 

b. Including Metric System. 

d. Brooks' Arithmetic (complete). 

e. Olney's Arithmetic. 

f. Robinson's Arithmetic. 

g. Wentworth's Arithmetic. 
i. Greenleaf's Arithmetic. 

k. Crittenden's Commercial Arithmetic. 
1. Elements of Arithmetic. 



m. Complete. 

n. White's Arithmetic. 

o. Mental Arithmetic. 

p. Venable's Practical Arithmetic. 

q. Stoddart's Mental Arithmetic. 

r. Higher Arithmetic. 

s. Seaver and Watson's Arithmetic. 

t. Ficlin's Arithmetic or eq. 

w. Fish's Arithmetic, 



3. ALGEBRA. 



a. Through Quadratic Equations. 

b. Including or through Radicals. 

c. With Proportion. 

d. Through Arithmetical Progression. 

e. Through Geometrical Progression. 

f. Binomial Theorem for Positive Integral Ex- 

ponents. 

g. Well's University Algebra. 

h. Peck's Manual (first 5 chapters) 

i. Intermediate Coefficients. 

j. Complete. 

k. Theory of Logarithms. 

1. Olney's University Algebra. 

m. Robinson's University Algebra. 



n. Todhunter's Algebra, 
o. Wentworth's (complete). 
p. Ray's New Algebra, 
q. To Equations of the 2d degree, 
r. Loomis' Treatise. 

s. Through Permutations and Combinations, 
t. Olney's University to Part III. 
u. Ficlin's Algebra. 
v. Greenleaf's Algebra, 
w. Through Equations of the Sd degree, 
x. To Quadratic Equations, 
y. To Logarithms. 

z. Advanced Algebra, such as Wait and Jones 
Treatise, or Oliver's. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 
4. ALGEBRA. 



27 



b. Including Theory of Exponents. 

c. Including Evolution. 

d. Elementary Algebra. 

f. Wentworth's, to chapter 18. 

g. Shoup's Algebra. 



h. Olney's Complete School Algebra, 
i. Including Theory of Equations, 
j. Wells' Academic Algebra, or eq. 
k. Todhunter's for Beginners. 
1. To Equations of the 1st degree. 



5. PLANE GEOMETRY. 



a. First two books of Euclid, or eq. 

d. Davies' Legendre, first 4 books. 

e. Chauvenet, 6 books or eq. 

f. Wentworth's Elements Plane and Solid, first 

5 books. 

g. Newcomb's Elements, first 3 books or eq. 
h. Newcomb's Elements, 6 books or eq. 

i. Plane Geometry, entire. 

j. Wells' Geometry. 

k. Hamblin Smith's Elements, 6 books. 

1. Davies' Legendre, 9 books. 

m. Plane and Solid Geometry. 



n. Wentworth's Plane Geometry, complete. 

o. Olney s Geome'^y. 

p. Wentworth's Plane and Solid, first 6 books. 

q. Wentworth, first 3 books. 

r. Byerly's Chauvenet, complete. 

s. Wentworth's Plane, first 4 books. 

t. Chauvenet, 5 books, or eq. 

u. Wentworth, 3 books. 

w. Loomis' Geometry, 5 books. 

x. Davies' Legendre, 6 books. 

y. One book of Geometry. 

z. Newcomb's Geometry, complete. 



6. GEOMETRY. 



a. Plane, Solid and Spherical Geometry. 

b. Newcomb's GeomeLry. exclusive of chapters on 

the Ellipse, Hyperbola and Parabola. 

c. Newcomb's Solid Geometry and Elementary 

Conic Sections. 

d. Solid Geometry. 

e. Pour books of Geometry. 

f . Elementary Geometry. 

h. Rice and Johnson's Differential and Integral 
Calculus. 



i. Elements of Analytical Geometry, 
j. Elements of Plane and Solid Geometry, 
k. Geometry of Space. 
1. Chauvenet, complete or eq. 
m. Mensuration of Lines, Surfaces and Volumes, 
n. Wentworth's Plane, Solid and Spherical Geom- 
etry, 
o. Wells' Plane and Solid Geometry. 



a. Brigg's Analytical Geometry. 

b. Church's Descriptive Geometry. 

c. Church's Shades, Shadows and Perspective 



GEOMETRY. 

d. Church's Analytical Geometry. 

e. Wood's Analytical Geometry. 



8. TRIGONOMETRY. 



Byerly's Chauvenet. 
Wheeler's Logarithms. 
Wheeler's Plane Trigonometry. 
Plane and Analytical Trigonometry. 
Newcomb's larger Trigonometry, first 6 chaprs. 
Wood's Plane and Analytical Trigonometry. 
Plane Trigonometry. 
Spherical Trigonometry. 



j. Oliver's Trigonometry, 
k. Wait's Trigonometry. 
1. Jones' Treatise on Trigonometry, 
m. Trigonometry and Mensuration, 
n. Murray's Compass Surveying, 
o. Application of Trigonometry to Surveying and 
Navigation. 



9. FRENCH. 



Keetel's Elementary French Grammar. 

Whitney's Grammar. 

Translation or Reading at Sight of French 

Prose. 
Otto's French Grammar, Part I. 
Fallet's Princess de l'Art (90 pp.) 
La Combe's Petite Historie du Peuple, Francais 

(20 exercises). 
Translation of Simple Sentences into French. 
General Principles of French Grammar. 
Brachet and Dussouchet's Petite Grammaire 

Francaise, Part I. 
Delille's Condensed Instruction (pp. 11-143). 



m. Translation of 50 pages of French Prose. 

n. Elements of French Grammar. 

o. Keetel's Collegiate French Grammar. 

p. Whitney's French Gramar, entire or its eq. 

q. Bocher's Modern French Plays, or eq. 

r. Brun's Tableau de la Revolution Frangaise. 

s. Roemer's Polyglot Reader. 

t. Robertson's French Grammar. 

u. Cours de Lecture I. 

v. Telemaque. 

w. Hennequin's Text Books. 

x. French Grammar and Reader. 



10. GERMAN. 



a. Keetel's Elementary Grammar, or eq. 

b. Otto's Grammar, Part I. 

c. Translation at Sight of German Prose. 

d. Rosenstengel's Reader. 

e. Der Zerbrochene Krug (20 exercises). 

f . General Principles of German Grammar. 

g. Translation of Simple Sentences into German, 
i. Stahl's German Versions. 

j. Whitney's German Reader (25 pages). 

k. Whitney's German Grammar, complete or eq. 

1. Whitney's German Reader (100 pp.) 

m. Brandt's German Grammar. 



n. Boisen and Barnhardt's Sprachbuch. 

o. Minna von Barnheim (Lessing). 

p. Otto's German Reader. 

q. Boisen's Reader (160 pp., with analysis). 

r. Aim's Method. 

s. Grimm's Marchen. 

t. Otis' Elementary German. 

u. German Grammar and Reader. 

v. One Year of German. 

w. Schmitz' German Grammar. 

x. Klemm's Reader. 

y. Schiller's Wilhelm Tell, and Maria Stuan. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



9i. FBENCH. 



Larousse's Grammaire Complete. 
Sauveur s Grammaire pour les Anglais. 
Bougeault's Precis de la Litterature Francaise 

to the 16th Century- 
Fontaine's Fables (6) Memorized. 
Les Enchantements de la Foret, by Andre 

Theuriet. 
Greville's Perdue. 

Le Roman d'un Jeune Homme Pauvre. 
Les Precieuses Ridicules — Moliere. 
Esther — Racine. 
Borel's Grammaire. 
French Composition. 
Duffet's French Method. 



m. Pylodet's Litterature Contemporaine. 



n. La Fontaine (13 fables), 
o. Sauveur's Causeries avec mes Eleves. 
Sauveur's Les Contes Merveilleux. 
Lectures Frangaises — A. Cohn. 
Two Classic Plays— Moliere, Racine. 
La Langue Frangaise — Bercy. 
Grammaire et Exercises — Larive & Fleury. 
u. Sauveur's Petites Causeries. 
v. Worman's 1st and 2d French Book, 
x. George Sand (Marianne), Sandeau (Mile, de La. 
Leigliere), Augier et Sandeau (Le Gendre de 
Monsieur Poirer). Henry Greville (Dosia), 
Moliere (L'Avare), Racine (Andromache), Cor- 
neille (Horace). 



10\. GERMAN. 



a. La Motte Fouque's Undine. 

c. Schiller's Wallenstein. 

d. Lessing's Nathan der Weise. 

e. German Composition. 

f. Wilhelmi, einer muss Heirathen. 

g. Benedix, Eigensinn. 
h. Die Piccolomini. 

i. Deutshe Grammatik — Wenckebach, Schra- 

kamp. 
k. Conversation : Deutscher Anschauungs — Un- 

terricht fur Amerikaner — Wenckebach. 



1. Poetry : Die Schonster Deutscheu Leider — 

Wenckebach, 
n. Das Deutsche Buch — Van Daell & Schrakamp. 
o. Anderson's Bilderbuch ohne Bilder. 
p. Ausgewsehlte Gedichte, 
q. Das Leben von Schiller. 
r. Gosthe, Hermann and Dorethea. 
s. Chamisso (Peter Schlemihl). 
t. Freytag (Aus Neuer Zeit, chapters V, VI, IX). 



11. IATIN GRAMMAS. 



Harkness' Latin Grammar or eq. 
Collar and Darnell's Beginner's Latin. 
Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar. 
Gildersleeve's Latin Grammar. 
Leighton's Lessons in Grammar, or eq. 
Tetlow's Latin Lessons, or eq. 
Bennett's first Latin Exercise Book, 
i. Wilkin's Primer of Antiquities, 
j. Gildersleeve's Latin Primer, 
k. Jones' first Latin Lessons, or eq. 
1. Latin Grammar, i. e., simpler rules for compo- 
sition and derivation of words, syntax of 
cases and verbs, structure of sentences, indi- 
rect discourse and the subjunctive, the in- 
flections. 



m, Grammatical Questions on Subject-Matter of 
Required Latin Prose, including the prosody, 
history, antiquities and mythology of the 
passage read. 

n. Latin Grammar, including the rules of quantity. 

o. With Latin Prosody of the Prescribed Prose. 

p. With Scanning of the Passage Named. 

q. With Etymology and Syntax of the Passage 
Read. 

r. Roman Pronunciation. 

s. Continental Pronunciation. 

t. English Method Pronunciation. 

u. Fisher's Three Pronunciations of Latin. 

v. Hexameter Verse. 

w. General Rules of Prosody. 



12. LATIN PROSE. 



a. 2 books, Csesar's Commentaries on Gallic War. 

b. 3 " . " 

c. 4 " 

d. 5 " 

e. 6 " 

f. 7 " 

h. Caesar's Commentaries on Civil War. 
i. Kelsey's Caesar. 

k. Translation at Sight, from Caesar. 
1. Translation at Sight, from Cicero's Orations, 
m. Translation at Sight, from Ovid's Metamor- 
phoses, 
o. Translation at Sight, from the JEneid. 



p, Translation of English into Latin Prose. 

v. Retranslation of English Sentences from first 
book of Caesar into Latin. 

r. Translation into Latin of a passage of con- 
nected English narrative based upon some 
portion of the prescribed prose. 

t. Translation at Sight of Simple Prose Latin. 

v. Allen's Latin Reader. 

x. With History, Geography and Mythology of 
the Passage Read. 

y. Ovid's Metamorphoses, 2,500 lines. 

z. Two Years' Study of Latin Language and 
Literature. 



13. LATIN PROSE. 



Virgil's j-Eneid, 1st 6 books. 
" " 5 " 

(< <* tc £ «( 

" 3 " 
" " 8 books. 



Virgil's iEneid Entire. 
Virgil's Bucolics. 
Virgil s Eclogues, entire 
Virgil's Georgics. 
k. Virgil's ^neid, 10 books and 1,200 lines of 

Ovid. 
1 Questions on Antiquities Suggested by the Pre- 
scribed Passages. 
m. Sallust's Cataline. 



n. Sallust's Jugurthine War. 

o. Harkness' Sallust. 

p. Harkness' Latin Reader. 

q. Harkness' Latin Composition. 

r. Arnold s Latin Prose Composition (44 exer- 
cises). 

s. Jones' Latin Prose Composition and Exercises. 

t. Abbot's Latin Prose through English Idiom. 

u. Allen & Greenough's Composition. 

v. W. F. Allen's Prose Composition (one-half the 
exercises). 

w. Elements of Latin Prose Composition. 

x. Smith's Latin Principia. 

y. Comstock's 1st Latin Book. 

z. Bennett's 1st Latin Exercise Book. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



2 9 



14. LATIN PROSE. 



a. Cicero's Orations Against Cataline (3). 

b. •' " " " (4). 

c. Cicero's Orations (5). 

d. Cicero's Select Orations (6). 

e. Cicero's Orations Against Cataline and that for 

the Poet Archias. 

f . Cicero's Orations [including : — ] (7). 

g. Cicero's 14th Phillipic. 
h. Cicero's Milo. 

i. Cicero's Orations, including the one for the 
Manilian Law. 

j. Cicero's Cato Major. 

k. First Two Orations of Cicero Against Cata- 
line. 

1. Cicero's De Senectute, 

m. Cicero's Oration for the Poet Archias. 

15. GREEK 

a. Hadley's Greek Grammar or eq. 

b. Goodwin s Grammar. 

c. (With) Prosody of the Passage named. 

d. Grammatical Questions on the subject-matter 

of the required Prose. 

e. Hadley and Aliens Grammar, 
g. Pronunciation Continental. 

h. Pronunciation according to written accents. 

k. Goodwin's Readei or eq. 

1. Etymology and Syntax of the Grammar. 



n. Cicero's Orations, including the four against 

Cataline. 
p. Gildersleeve's Latin Exercise Book, 
q. Cornelius Nepos' Lives, 
r. The Marcellus (Cicero). 
s. St. Ambrose — Extracts, 
t. St. Jerome— Hilarionis Vita, 
u. Translation into Latin of a piece of connected 

English, based upon the matter contained in 

the first 40 lessons of Allen's Introduction to 

Latin Composition, or its eq. 
v. Harkness' first year in Latin. 
w. Latin Mythology of the Prescribed Passage. 
x. Allen s Latin Composition 
y. Cicero's Oration for Ejng Deiotarus. 
z. One Oration of Cicero. 

GRAMMAR. 

m. Candidates are expected to have read one 
hundred pages of Attic Prose. 

n. Pronunciation according to the Erasmian me- 
thod. 

o. General Questions on the Grammar and Pro- 
sody. 

p. Leighton's First Lessons in Greek. 

q. Except Prosody. 

t. Accentuation. 

v. Must be familiar with the Inflections. 



16. GREEK PROSE. 



a. Jones' Greek Prose Composition Exercises. 

b. 4 Books Xenophon's Anabasis. 

c. 3 Books Xenophon's Anabasis. 

d. 2 Books Xenophon's Anabasis 

e. 100 pages Goodwin's Greek Reader. 

f Translation into Greek of a passage of con- 
nected English narrative based upon some 
portion of first 5 chapters of first book of 
Xenophon's Cycropsedia. 

g Translation at sight of average passages from 
Greek authors. 

h. Translation at sight from the Iliad. 

i. Translation at sight from some work of Xeno- 
phon's. 



j. Translation of simple English sentences into 

Greek, 
k. Homer's Iliad, 2 books. 
1. Homer's Iliad, 3 books, 
m. Homer's Iliad, 4 books, 
o. Leighton's Prose Composition Lessons, 
p. Boise's Prose Composition, 
r. Arnold's Exercises, 
s. Kendrick's Greek Ollendorff. 
u. Casserly's Jacob's Reader, 
v. Xenophon's Anabasis complete, 
w. Gospels of St. John. 
x. White's First Lessons (80) 
y. Three Gospels in Greek Testament. 



17. GREEK PROSE. 



a. Whiton's First Greek Reader. 

b. Sedgwick's First Greek Writer (60 exercises). 
c Omit Catalogue of Ships. 

d Reading at sight Easy Greek Prose. 

e Harkness First Greek Book. 

f . Elements of Greek Composition (Prose). 

g Twenty Exercises in Jones' Greek Prose. 

h. Translation at sight from the Anabasis. 

i. Goodwin's Anabasis. 

j. Goodwin's Selections from Xenophon and He- 
rodotus. 

k, Translation into Greek of simple sentences 
suitable to students who have taken exercises 
in some standard work on Prose composition. 

1. Arnold's First Greek Book. 

m. Introduction and 60 Exercises. 



n. Hadley-Allen's Greek Lessons. 

o. Xenophon's Anabasis, 5 books. 

p. Homer's Odyssey, 2 books. 

q. First 20 Exercises. 

r. First 25 Exercises. 

s. Translation at sight from Homer. 

t. Spencer's Arnold's Exercises, 50 Exercises. 

u. Keep's Lessons. 

v. Translation at sight of average passages from 

Homer, 
w. Translation at sight of easy passages from 

Homer and Herodotus, 
x. Translation into Latin of a similar passage 

based upon some portion of Nepos' Lives of 

Miltiades, Themistocles, Alcibiades, Epamin- 

ondas and Hannibal. 



17. ENGLISH GRAMMAR. 



a. Whitney's English Grammar or eq. 

b. Reed's and Kellogg's Grammar or eq. 

d. Abbott's How to Parse. 

e. Dalgleisch's Grammatical Analysis or equiva- 

lent in English Grammar and Analysis of a 
sentence. 

f . Brown's Grammar, 
h. Ridpath's Grammar. 

i. Murray's Advanced Lessons in English Com- 
position, Analysis and Grammar, 
j. Including Prosody, 
k Abbott's How to Write Clearly, 
m. Sentential Analysis, 
n. Word Analysis (Swinton) 
o. WeLh's Essentials of English. 



p. Quackenbos or equivalent. 

q. Word Analysis and Criticism. 

r. English Phonetics. 

s. The composition or essay submitted will be 
corrected for spelling, punctuation, division 
into paragraphs, grammar and expression. 

t. Evidence of proficiency in spelling and com- 
position will be required in the form of a 
brief essay. 

u. Hodgson's Errors in the Use of English. 

v. The Principles of Grammar. 

x. English Prose Composition. 

y. Trench on Words. 

z. Harvey's English Grammar. 



3° 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



19. ENGLISH COMPOSITION. 



Subjects for composition drawn from, viz : 

a. Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. 

b. Shakespeare's Midsummer's Night's Dream. 

c. Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. 

d. Merchant of Venice. 

f. Lamb's Tales of Shakespeare. 

g. Addison's Essays. 
n. Irving's Alhambra. 

q. Irving's Bracebridge Hall. 



r. Irving's Sketch Book. 

t. Life of Longfellow. 

u. Gray's Elegy. 

w. Goldsmith's Deserted Village, or Vicar of 

Wakefield. 
x. Johnson's Rasselas. 
y. Shakespeare's Tempest, 
z, Richardson's English Literature. 



20. ENGLISH COMPOSITION AND LITERATURE. 



a. A short essay on a subject chosen from best 

current literature such as : 

b. Kellogg's English Literature or eq. 

c. Thackeray's English Humorists. 

d. Thackeray's Newcomes. 

e. Life of Thackeray. 

f. Smith's Studies in English Literature. 

g. Milton's Paradise Lost (first 2 books). 
h. Charles Dickens' Tale of Two Cities. 

i. Lowell's Vision of Sir Launfaul, or Biglow 

Papers, 
j. Scott's Marmion, or Lady of the Lake, 
k. Scott's Rob Roy. 

I. Alexander Smith on the Writing of Essays. 
m. Franklin's Autobiography. 
n. Swinton's School Composition. 



o. Hawthorne's Marble Faun. 

oo. Hawthorne's Twice-Told Tales. 

p. Coleridge's Ancient Mariner. 

q Chittenden's English Composition. 

r. Irving's Alhambra. 

s. Miss Mulock's "John Halifax, Gent." 

t. Johnston's American Politics. 

u. A Theme Chosen from Swinton's Outlines of 

the World's History. 
v. Cowper's Task, Book II. 
w. Holmes' Autocrat of the Breakfast Table, 
x. Bryant's Poems. 

y. Kingsley's Hereward, the Last of the English. 
z. An essay upon some topic assigned at the time 

of the examination. 



21. ENGLISH COMPOSITION. 



a. A Theme Chosen from Anderson's Popular 

History of United States. 

b. A Theme from Anderson's History of England. 

c. Scott's Ivanboe. 

d. Scott's Quentin Durward. 

e. Quackenboss' Composition, or eq. 

f . Life of M. Faraday. 

g. English Analysis and Composition, 
h. American Literature. 

i. English Grammar and Composition. 

j. Reading English. 

k. History of English Literature. 

1. Mental Philosophy. 

m. Moral Science. 

n. Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Twelfth Night; 

Irving's Bracebridge Hall, Macaulay's Lays 

of Ancient Rome, 
o. Elocution. 
p. Whittier's Snow-Bound. 



q. Shakespeare's Julius CaBsar, Twelfth Night; 
Johnson's Lives of Addison and Pope, Thack- 
eray's English Humorists, Dobson's 18th Cen^ 
tury Essays, Pope's Rape of the Lock anu 
Essay on Criticism, Miss Austin's Pride and 
Prejudice, Irving's Bracebridge Hall, Macau- 
lay's Lays of Ancient Rome. 

r. Elements of Composition, Reading and Spell- 
ing. 

s. Whitney & Knox's Elementary Lessons. 

t. Swinton's Classical English Reader. 

v. Each candidate will be required to write a 
short English composition, correct in spell- 
ing, punctuation, division into paragraphs, 
grammar and expression, upon a subject an- 
nounced at the time of the examination. 

w. Lady of the Lake. 

y. Writing from Dictation. 

z. Longfellow's Evangeline. 



22. RHETORIC. 



c. D. J. Hill's Elements of Rhetoric and Compo- 

sition. 

d. A. S. Hill's Principles of Rhetoric. 

e. Punctuation. 

f . Criticism of Incorrect English. 

g. Quackenboss' Rhetoric, or eq. 



h. Elements of Versification, Figures of Speech, 

Rhythm. 
1. Hart's Rhetoric Complete, 
m. Elements of Rhetoric, 
n. Welsh's Complete Rhetoric, 
o. Kellogg's Rhetoric. 



23. ORTHOGRAPHY AND COMPOSITION. 

b. Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies. I f . Shakespeare's Macbeth. 



c. Milton's Areopagitica or Lycidas. 
e. Milton's Comus. 

2d. GEOGRAPHY, 

a. Appleton's Higher, or eq. 

b. Guyot's Grammar School. 

c. Monteith's Geography, or eq. 

d. Harper's School Geography. 

g. Sadlier's Geography of the World. 

h. Swinton's Grammar School, or eq. 

j. Modern Descriptive Geography. 

k. Geography of Ancient Italy. 

1. Geography of Ancient Greece. 

m. Geography of Asia Minor. 

n. Tozer's Primer of Classical Geography. 

p. Ancient Geography. 



g. Derivative Orthography. 



MODERN AND ANCIENT. 

q. Schmidt's Course in Ancient Geography, or eq. 

r. Long's Classical Atlas — Italy, Sicily, Greece and 
Asia Minor. 

s. Outlines of Greek Geography. 

t. Outlines of Roman Geography. 

u. Ancient Geography enough to trace the Expe- 
dition against Troy, the Voyage of Mnea,a, 
the Anabasis and the Gallic War. 

v. Houston's Physical Geography. 

w. Classical Geography. 

y. Geography of Ancient Gaul and Spain. 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



31 



25. GEOGRAPHY. 



a. Sadlier's Physical Geography. 

b. Warren's Physical Geography. 

c. Maury's Physical Geography. 

d. Geikie's Physical Geography, or eq. 

e. Townsend's Shorter Course of Civil Govern- 

ment, 
g. Young's Government Class Book, or eq. 
h. Civil Government, 
i. Alden's Science of Government, 
j Martin's Civil Government, or eq. 
k. Physical Geography. 
1. Guyot's Physical Geography. 



. (See 24 v). 

Harper's School Geography. 

Elements of Political Science. 

Elements of Physical Geography as contained 
in Guyot's Grammar School Geography. 

Must be able to draw a map of Greece, its 
Islands and Asia Minor. 

Political Geography. 

Civil Geography. 

With questions on the geography of the his- 
torical passage or subject prescribed. 



26. UNITED STATES HISTORY. ENGLISH HISTORY. 



a. Doyle's History of U. S. or eq. 

b. Higginson's Young Folk's History of U. S. (to 

end of Chapter 21.) 

c. Johnston's History of U. S., for schools, from 

§ 269 to end of book. 

d. Anderson's History of U. S. 

e. Ridpath's History of U. S. 

f. An essay upon some topic selected from His- 

tory of U. S. 

g. Scudder's History of U. S. 

h. Swinton's Condensed History. 

i. Berard's History of U. S. or eq. 

j. Davidson's History of South Carolina. 

k. Sadlier's History of U. S. 

1. Johnston's History of U. S., complete. 



m. Johnson's History of U. S. 

n. History of U. S., including Constitution. 

o. Guest & Underwood's Handbook of English 

History to year of 1793. 
p. Green's English People, 
q. Stephen's History of U. S. or its eq. 
r. Gardner's History of England. 
s. Thompson's History of England. 
t. English History (Anderson's or eq). 
u. Modern History, 
v. History of Modern England, 
w. American History. 
x. Outlines of the History of the U. S. (Barnes' 

or eq). 
y. History of England since the great rebellion. 



27. ANCIENT HISTORY. 



a. Leighton's History of Rome, to death of Corn- 

modus. 

b. Leighton's History of Rome, to death of Mar- 

cus Aurelius. 

c. Creighton's Primer of Rome. 

d. Roman History to death of Augustus. 

f. Rawlinson's Manual of Ancient History. 

g. Vuibert's Ancient History. 

h. Cox's Manual Classical Mythology or eq. 
i. Roman Antiquities. 

j. Freeman's General Sketch of Ancient History. 
1. Outlines of Greek and Roman History, 
m. Smith's smaller History of Greece to death of 
Alexander. 



n. Fyffe's Primer of Greece, 
o. Pennell's Grecian History or eq. 
q. Ancient History, 
r. Roman History. 
s. Grecian History. 

t. Questions on History suggested by the pre- 
scribed passage, 
u. Mediaeval History, 
v. To the death of Alexander, 
w. To the death of Marcus Aurelius. 
x. Leighton to the accession of Augustus, 
z. Smith's smaller History of Rome. 



28. GENERAL HISTORY. 



a. Swinton's General History. 

c. Swinton's Outlines of the World's History to 

A. D. 476. 

d. Lord's Modern History or eq. 

e. Elementary History. 

f . Outlines of General History. 

g. Outlines of Ancient and Modern History, 
h. Parley's Universal History. 

i. Modern History 



j . Freeman's General Sketch of European History. 

k. Gilmour's Bible History or eq. 

1, Universal History. 

n. To the reign of Marcus Aurelius. 

o. Eliot's History of the U. S. 

r. Quackenboss' History of U. S. 

s. Barnes' General History. 

t. Sheldon's Studies. 

u. Bible History, through Exodus. 



29. PHYSICS. 



a. Avery's Elements of Natural Philosophy or eq. 

b. Gage's Elements of Natural Philosophy. 

c. Forty experiments in Physics performed in 

laboratory by applicant. Subjects are chosen 
from Mechanics, Sound, Light, Heat and 
Electricity. 

d. Stewart's Primer of Natural Philosophy. 

e. J. Dorman Steele's Text-book or eq. 

f. Cooley's Natural Philosophy. 

g. Norton's Natural Philosophy, 
li . Elementary Physics. 

i. Goodwin's Elementary Statics. 



j. Peck's Ganot's Physics. 

k. Wood's Elementary Analytical Mechanics. 

1. Ganot's Physics. 

m. Atkinson's Ganot's Physics. 

n. Wells' Natural Philosophy. 

o. Elementary Mechanics. 

p. A course of at least 60 experiments in addition 

to those of the Elementary Physics referred 

to as 29 c. 
q. Both a written and laboratory examination in 

physics will be required. 



32 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



30. PHYSIOLOGY. GEOLOGY. ZOOLOGY. 



Martin's Human Body or eq. 
Wilder's Health Notes and Emergencies 
Hutchinson's Physiology. 
Elementary Physiology. 
Geikie's Anatomy and Physiology. 
Geology. 
Physiology, 
Huxley's Physiology. 
Vegetable Physiology. 



n. Packard's Zoology (briefer course.) 
o, Wiachell's Geological Studies, 
p. Hooker's Physiology, 
q. Jouman's Physiology, 
r. Balton's Physiology. 
s. Morse's First Book in Zoology. 
t. Dana's Elementary Geology or eq. 
v. Smith's Primer of Physiology. 



31. BOTANY. CHEMISTRY. ASTRONOMY. 



a. Gray's School and Field Book of Botany. 

b. Written Analysis of (50 Species of Flowering 

Plants). 

c. Youman's first and second Book of Botany. 

d. Elementary Botany. 

e. Kellerman's Botany. 

f . "Wood's Botany. 

g. Chemistry, Towne's Manual (12th edition) from 

p. 131 to p. 274 inclusive, 
h. Lockyer's Elementary Astronomy or eq. 
i. Sharpless & Phillips' Astronomy, 
j. Avery's Chemistry, 
k. Nichol's Abridgement of Eliot & Storer's 

Manual of Chemistry 



I. Elementary Chemistry. 

m. Elements of Inorganic Chemistry. 

n. Barker's Elementary Chemistry, including a 

brief resume of Organic Chemistry, 
o. Newcombe & Holden's Astronomy, 
p. "Vegetable Anatomy. 

q. First 27 Chapters of Gray's Lessons in Botany. 
r. Valentine's Chemistry. 
s. Cooley's Chemistry, 
t. Steele's Chemistry, 
u. Gray's "How Plants Grow." 
v. A Course of at least 60 Experiments in General 

Chemistry Performed at School by the Pupil. 



32. DRAWING. 



a. Outline Drawing. 

b. Drawing of Simple Objects. 

c. Including ability to Sketch. 

d. Shading of Objects, such as a Tree House, 

etc. 

e. Hertzberg's Drawing. 

f . Map Drawing. 

g. Illustrative Drawing. 

h. Mahan's Elementary Drawing. 



i. Industrial Drawing, 
j . Freehand Linear Drawing, 
k. "Warren's Isometric Drawing. 
1. Geometrical Drawing, 
m. To Draw from Memory a Map of Italy. 
o. Shading from the Flat. 

p. Warren's Text Book on Draughting Instru- 
ments. 



33. MISCELLANEOUS. 



De Harbe's Small Catechism with Explanation. 

Book-keeping — Crittenden's or eq. 

Writing — Lessons in Penmanship. 

Book-keeping — on a knowledge of Double 
Entry from Cash-Book, Day -Book and Ledger, 
and the making out of Balance Sheets. 
Bryant & Stratton's Book-keeping. 

Brown's Commercial Calculation, Correspond- 
ence and Banking. 

Sauer's Italian Grammar. 



o. Sixty pages Mantilla's Libro de Lectura. 

p. Sight Reading of Easy Italian Prose 

q. Musselman's Compendium of Penmanship. 

r. Elements of Christian Evidences. 

v. One Hundred pages of Le Conscrit de 1813. 

w. Translation from Klnapp's Modern French 

Readings or eq. 
x. Commercial Law. 
y. Macmillan's Latin Course, 
z. One Book of Ceeaar's 



34. SPECIAL. 

a. Graduates of Colleges presenting a diploma for Bachelor's Degree, will not be required to pass in 

Chemistry, English Grammar, Composition, Rhetoric, Algebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, 
American andEnglish History and Physical Geography. 

b. Graduates and Students of Colleges and Schools of Science who shall have completed studies that 

are equivalent to the requirements for admission, may be admitted to Sophomore class without 
examination in such studies, upon presenting diplomas or certificates of good standing and 
honorable dismissal satisfactory to the examining officers. 

c. The examination is oral as well as written. 

d. Satisfactory certificates from the Principals of High Schools and Academies in good standing will 

exempt the candidate from examination in Arithmetic, Physics, Ancient History and Geography 
(or other studies required for admission). 

f . Certificates issued by the Regents of the University of the State of New York are accepted in place 

of the examination in English Grammar, Geography and Arithmetic. 

g. Diplomas issued by the Regents to Graduates from the High Schools and Academies of the State 

of New York, and diplomas issued by the State Normal Schools are accepted in place of the 
examinations in all the subjects named above. 

h. Candidates for instruction in Piano-forte playing must pass a satisfactory examination in harmony 
and execution, viz : on harmony as far as and inclusive of the harmonizing of chorals for four 
voices. ,In execution the applicant will be tested as to the correctness of manual position and 
movement, acquaintance with the different kinds of touch, rapidity, clearness in the execution 
of all the major, minor and chromatic scales, arpeggios of common chords and chords of the 
seventh. 

i. Applicant must be familiar with Cramer's Studies (Billow) Books 1 and 2. 

j. Clementi's "Gradus ad Parnassum" (Tausig Edn). 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 33 

k. Pieces by Chopin, Schubert, Schumann, Mendelssohn, Raff, Scharwenka, Moszkowski, Beethoven's 

Sonatas. 
1. Candidates for vocal instruction, must also possess ability to sing readily at sight, and skill in solo 

singing, 
n. Applicants who have completed their course of preparation in High Schools which have been 

commissioned by the State Board of Education, will be admitted to the Freshman's class 

without examination, 
o. It does not appear from an examination of the catalogue that an entrance examination is required, 
p. Applicants availing themselves of the privilege of the optional periods of examination must offer 

in June of the first year, the following : History of the United States, Geography, Arithmetic, 

Plane Geometry and Algebra to Quadratic Equations, 
q. Conditioned Students must make up all their conditions within their Freshman year. 
s. To enter the Scientific Course, the candidate who wishes to pursue the study of Latin must sustain 

an examination in the above named studios, except Virgil and Greek. The candidate who 

desires to take Greek and omit Latin will be examined in the studies named above, except 

Latin, the fourth book of the Anabasis and Homer's Iliad. 

35. EQUIVALENTS, ETC. 

c. In place of the Latin mentioned both German and French may be offered as follows : fin brackets. 

e. " " Greek " " German or French "" " viz: 

f. " " Latin " " French or German " " " 
h " " French " German may be offered, viz : 
i. In addition the applicant must offer Latin, French or German as 
j. In place of German, French and Latin may be offered as follows : 
k. " " French, Latin and German " " " " 
n. The applicant may offer one of the four starred subjects. * 
o. " " " " any two of the " " * 
p. 112 pages of Goodwin's Greek Reader will be accepted as equivalent to four books of the Anabasis, 
r. In place of the Greek just mentioned the following may be offered. [In brackets.] 

s. Students who do not require German in their course of instruction are not required to offer an 

examination in the subject at entrance. 
t. In place of the Latin just mentioned the following may be offered. [In brackets.] 
v. In place of the Anabasis and Homer mentioned candidates may offer viz : 
w. In place of the Caesar required an equivalent amount of Cicero or Virgil may be offered, 
x. " " " " " " " " Ovid or Virgil " " 

y. Those who do not propose to take Latin in their college course may substitute for the regular 

prescribed Latin entrance studies, the following, 
z. Greek Grammar and Anabasis will be accepted as an equivalent for studies other than Latin and 

Mathematics, which represent an equal amount of time and labor. 

36. EQUIVALENTS AND SPECIAL. 

a In addition to the Latin one other language is required, such as : [In brackets.] 
b. This may be Greek, German or French. [In brackets.] 

d. Applicant for admission may offer an examination in [21 q, 22 f, 16 g, 15 o, 12 t, 10 c, 9 c, 27 a m, 

26 b c o, 3 a, 5 i] [(31 h, 29 a) or (29 b c,)] and on any two groups of the following groups, each 
group in brackets from 36 e to m. 

e. [(17 v, 15 o,) or (17 w, 15 o.)] 

f. [12 1 o, 11 m.] 

g. Tl6f, 17 x.] 
h. [10 c o u y, 10} r s t e.] 



i. [9i x ] 
j. [8 c o b, 6 
k. [6 i or d, : 



6 d or i.j 
" , 29 <b i, 7 a.] 
1. [29 p q.] 
m. (31 v.) 
n. Or the applicant may offer all the studies mentioned in 36 d, except either [9 c] or [10 c] and any 

three of the groups included in 36 e to m. 
o. Or the applicant may offer all the studies mentioned in 36 d, except either [12 t] or [15 o, 16 g] and 

any four of the groups included in 36 e to m, including 36 j and either one of 36 k 1 or m. 
p. Or all studies mentioned under 36 d excepting either (12 t) or (15 o, 16 g,) and except either 9 c or 

10 c, and on at least five groups mentioned from 36 e to m, including 36 j and either one of 

36 k 1 or m. 
q. Applicant must undergo a rigid physical examination. 



34 



AMERICAN COLLEGE MANUAL. 



REFERENCE LIST 



OF 



Colleges which Admit both Sexes, and those which Admit Young Women only. 



Note. — For requirements of admission to the former, consult Table No. 2 ; for admission to the latter, 
considt Table No. 3. 



Colleges Admitting both Men and Women. 

Albion College. 

Boston University. 

Buchtel College. 

Bucknell University. 

Cincinnati University. 

Columbia College. 

Colorado, University of. 

Columbian University. 

Cooper Union. 

Cornell College. 

Cornell University. 

De Pauw University. 

Georgia, University of. 

Illinois University. 

Indiana University. 

Kansas, University of. 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 

Michigan, University of. 

Minnesota, University of. 

Missouri, State University of. 



Oberlin College. 
Ohio State University. 
Pennsylvania College. 
Purdue University. 
Swarthmore College. 
Syracuse University. 
Wisconsin University. 
Wooster, University of. 

Colleges foe Young Women Only. 

Elmira College. 

Mills College and Seminary. 

Milwaukee College. 

Mount Holyoke Seminary and College. 

Ontario Ladies' College. 

Rockford Seminary. 

Smith College. 

Vassar College. 

Wellesley College. 

Wesleyan College (Cincinnati). 

WeBleyan Female College. 



Reference Table B. 



Note. — The references in this Table pertain wholly to Table No. 4. 



(a) Fee to the Demonstrator of Anatomy. 
(B) Contingent fee for damages, deposited an- 
nually. 

(c) Certificate fee. 

(d) Diploma fee. 

(E) Each examination. 

(f) Fee for dissection. 

(G) Gymnasium fee. 

(H) Candidates for free tuition must fulfil the fol- 
lowing conditions : 
1. — The applicant must present a certificate 
from some person or persons of good 
repute, stating that his circumstances 
are such that he cannot pay the tuition 
fee ; that he is of good moral character 
and studious habits ; that the writer is 
not a relative. A proper blank will be 
furnished on application to the regis- 
trar. 
2. — He must exhibit a proficiency in every 
subject of examination for admission, 
expressed by the number 6 of a scale of 
which 10 is the maximum. (Condi- 
tioned students will not receive free 
tuition.) 



3. — He must maintain, subsequent to his ad- 
mission, a standing in scholarship in 
every department of study expressed 
by the number 7, or an average stand- 
ing in all departments expressed by the 
number 8 of a similar scale, with no 
deficiency in any department, failing 
which he will forfeit his privilege. He 
will also forfeit his privilege should he 
be found deficient in any department 
at the end of the year. 
4. — Free students are not exempt from the 
payment of the fees for matriculation, 
for extra examinations, and for gradu- 
ations. 

(I) Incidentals. 

(l) Laboratory fee for chemistry. 

(M) Materials. 

(p) Practical chemistry. 

(b) Registration fee. 

(s) To students from other States. 

(t) Text-books. 

(u) Library fee. 

(w) To residents of Worcester County. 

(E N s) Expenses not stated. 



Note. — Total expenses per annum is exclusive of special fees, and includes only tuition fee, 
board and lodging. 



ADVERTISEMENTS. 



35 



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ADDRESS EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT. 



EBERHARD FABER 



545 and 547 Pearl Street, near Broadway, New York City. 



36 



ADVERTISEMENTS. 



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Books, call on or write to F. E. GRANT, 7 West 426 
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ADVERTISEMENTS. 



37 



WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY. 



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lustrations than any other American Diction- 
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Webster is Standard Authority in the Gov't Printing Office, „- -. , 

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38 



ADVERTISEMENTS. 



Bucknell . University 

TNVITES the attention of parents and students 
A to (1) its full Courses of Study, (2) its improved 
Buildings, (3) its Free Scholarships, (4) its large 
Library Fund, (5) its new Astronomical Observa- 
tory, (6) its Healthfulness of Location, (7) its 
Remarkable Cheapness. In these respects 

It has no Superior in Pennsylvania. 

It has three Departments : a College for Young 
Men, an Institute for Young Women and an 
Academy for Youths preparing for College, for 
Business, or for Teaching, with full and able 
Faculties. 

Its Courses of Lectures and facilities in Music 
and Art are of a superior character and will be 
faithfully kept at a standard to meet the demands. 

The recent additions to the Endowment enables 
the Corporation to offer inducements in advance 
of any that have been offered previously and to 
assure the satisfaction of patrons. 

It is important for the public to know that Uni- 
versity advantages are offered at less cost to the 
student than the prices of normal schools, acad- 
emies and other unendowed institutions, with 
feeble facilities. 

Catalogues and any desired information will be 
furnished by 

Pres. DAVID J. HILL, LL.D., Lewisburg, Pa. 



Courtlandt Plaee School, 

FOR BOYS, 
Lake-wood, New Jersey. 



Address, THOS. D. SUPLEE, Ph. D. 



"Slue Cetes." 

BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES. 

College Preparatory Academic Courses. 
MISS EARLE, 

1916 35th Street, Washington, D. C. 

THEHARTMANN PATENT INK-STAND. 



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absolutely clear ink, which is the best aid for 
clean and fine penmanship. This ink stand is 
| the only one that can give the self-clearing ink 
) below its scum to the pen— the only one that 
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$200. For circulars, address 

. Miss MARY EV ANS, Principal. 

French a^ English Home School 

FOR TWENTY GIRLS. NO DAY SCHOLARS. 

Greatest care in all the English studies. French 
taught orally and practically in such way as to 
enable pupils to converse and understand the 
language in two years course. Location remark- 
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TERMS, S300 S. YEAR. 

ADDRESS : 

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WILLIAM T, GREGG- 



IMPORTING AND MANUFACTURING 



=OPTICIAN, 



FACTORY : 

128 FRONT ST., 



25 John Street, 

NEW YORK. 



ASTRONOMICAL, 

ENGINEERING, 

SCIENTIFIC 
INSTRUMENTS, Etc, 



PHOTOGRAPHIC 
CAMERAS, 
LENSES, 

SHUTTERS, Etc. 



THE PHDTD-DPTICDINr, . 
Single, Double, Biunial and Vertical. 



ADVERTISEMENTS. 



39 



NEW YORK COLLEGE OF VETERINARY SURGEONS 

332 East 27th Street. 

(Chartered in 7857 by Special Act of the State Legislature.) 

The Collegiate Year in this Institution embraces a Regular Winter Session which will commence October 
1st, 1888, and end about the middle of March, 18S9. 



FACULTY. 



W. T. WHITE, M. D., President of the College. 

A. LOCKHART, M. R. C. V. S., Emeritus Professor of 

Theory and Practice of Veterinary Medicine. 
D. C. COMSTOCK, M. D., Professor of Descriptive and 

Comparative Anatomy. 
P. C. HO AG, M. D., Prof, of Comparative Physiology. 
J. M. HEARD, M. R. C. V. S., Professor of Clinical 

Surgery. 
L. McLEAN, M. R. C. V. S., Professor of Bovine and 

Ovine Pathology and Obstetrics. 
G. A. LYONS, M. D. , Prof essor of Histology. 
J. A. BREAKELL, M. D.,V. S., Assistant to the Chair 

of Bovine and Ovine Pathology. 
H. M. BIGGS, M. D., Prof, of Comparative Physiology. 



JAMES HAMILL, V. S., Professor of Operative Sur- 
gery and Horseshoeing. 

B. H. SEARING, M. D., Prof, of Chemisty and Hygiene. 

GEORGE KNIPE, M. D., Prof, of Equine Anatomy. 

R. A. McLEAN, V. S., Professor of Theory and Prac- 
tice of Veterinary Medicine. 

G. B. MICHENER, V. S., Professor of Materia Medica 
and Therapeutics. 

J. A. ANDREWS, M. D., Lecturer on Opthalmology. 

FRANK GRADER, M. D., Lecturer on Pathology. 

A. S. HEATH, M. D. , Lecturer on Diseases of Domestic 
Animals. 

H. D. GILL, V. S., Demonstrator of Anatomy and 
Secretary of the Faculty. 



Matriculation Ticket, 
Full Course of Lectures, 



FEES. 

$5.00. Dissecting Ticket, 
60.00. Diploma, 



- $10.00. 
25.00. 



The New York College of Veterinary Surgeons is the only Veterinary Institution in the State of New York 
which has an unquestioned authority to confer degrees and grant diplomas. Its Faculty endeavor by lectures, 
recitations, clinical teaching and practical exercises, to thoroughly qualify the students for the practice of veter- 
inary medicine. Special facilities are offered for clinical instruction, not only in the hospital connected with the 
College, but also in the various private hospitals devoted to the diseases incident to domestic animals. 

Histology, Chemistry, Microscopy and Pharmacy receive particular attention. The College has also a 
department for instruction in Scientific and Practical Shoeing, which will supply a want long felt for a 
better knowledge of this much neglected subject. 

This Course offers to enterprising young men, and even graduates in medicine, who are waiting for practice, 
an opportunity to adopt a more lucrative branch in an extensive field in which there is little or no competition. 
It also offers special advantages to students of general science. 

For further particulars and circulars, address 

HARRY D. GILL, V. S., Secretary of Faculty, 332 East 27th Street, New York. 



No. 2 ORIENTAL BUILDING, NEWARK, N. J. 



No. 217 STEWART BUILDING, NEW TORE CITY. 



ELEMENTARY A^HITECTURIL ENpIEERM 

EVENING CLASSES. 

On and after October 1st, Mr. C. Powell Karr, C. E. Ph. B. (S. of M., Columbia College) will open and 
personally conduct an Evening Class in Architectural Engineering, at No. 2 Oriental Building, Newark, N. J., 
from 8 P. M. to 9 p. m., Tuesday and Friday evenings of each week throughout the Fall and Winter Season. 



PRIVATE INSTRUCTION-HALF-HOUR SESSIONS. 

Monday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings, from 8 P. M. to 10 P. M. Half -hour Sessions on and after 
September 1st, 1888. 

ADMISSION TO COLLEGE. 

Students prepared for admission to the Architectural Course, at the School of Mines, Columbia College, 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cornell, Syracuse, Illinois and Pennsylvania Universities and all other 
Universities which have a course in Architecture or Architectural Engineering. 

Preparation by Mail, or by Half-hour Sessions, at the option of students. Students who wish to prepare 
for the Fall Examinations may make appointments at any time, for such instruction, during July, August 
and September. Special privileges to students by Mail. 

ADVANCED COURSES OF INSTRUCTION. 

Practising Architects, Draughtsmen and Students who desire a course of instruction in Advanced 
Architectural Engineering in Technical Work such as Steam and other modes of Heating, Lighting, Ventila- 
tion, Sanitation, Fire-proofing, Roof Design and Stress Calculations, Economics of Materials, Art of Estimating 
and Acoustics, will be required to pass a satisfactory examination in Algebra, Geometry, Plane Trigonometry, 
Theory and application of Logarithms and Elementary Physics. 

For terms, appointments and further information, apply either in person or by letter to 

C. POWELL KARR, C. E. ; 

Architect and Acoustician, 

217 STEWART BUILDING, 

NEW YORK CITY. 



ORIENTAL BUILDING, 

NEWARK, ,\. 



40 



ADVERTISEMENTS. 




PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY 

AT 

23 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK, 



DEVOTED TO 



ARCHITECTURE, ENGINEERING, FURNITURE, 
DECORATION AND ORNAMENT. 

Subscription f 6 a year. 

Sample subscriptions of three months $1.50. 

Single Copies 15 cents. 



SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED BY ALL BOOKSELLERS. 



FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS. 



PRESS NOTICES. 

One of the handsomest and best architectural papers among our exchanges is Building. 
Well illustrated, printed, and edited, treating on all matters of interest to the building trade. — 
Wood and Iron. 

For an architect or builder, this publication cannot fail to be of great and continual in- 
terest. — The New York World, 

We are in receipt of Building. It bears eloquent testimony to eminent literary as well 
as artistic talent, connected with its publication. — Chemical Review. 

Very attractive in appearance, and is well worthy of liberal patronage. — American 
Engineer. 

Nothing finer in its way has been offered to the public. — The Mechanical News. 

It is without doubt the most valuable publication of the kind published in the country. — 
Southern Lumberman. 

One of the best architectural periodicals of the day is Building. — The Christian Union. 

It is not often that so much and so valuable material is found at one time in a trade journal. 
— The Publisher's Weekly. 

The magazine is well edited, and must prove very interesting to those interested in build- 
ing. — American Machinist. 



Catalogue of books on building, painting, and decorating, and catalogue of 
drawing instruments and materials mailed 071 application to 

WM. T. COMSTOCK, Publisher, 

23 Warren Street, New YorTe. 



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Boating or Vacation Suits on hand or to order. 





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FOR TELEGRAPHERS AND ELECTRICIANS. 

This is not a Top feed or Bottom feed pen. It is a DOUBLE-FEED, 

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jlijlMaker of Fine Jewelry,: 

Trophies and Prizes for Athletic sports, College Fraternity Badges, Class Rings, etc. 

CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. 






■STYLO AND FOUNTAIN PENS. 



Send for circulars. Agents wanted. Fountain Holder filled with best quality GOLD PEN. Stylo, $1 : 
Fountain, $1.50 and up. j. ULRICH & CO., 106 Liberty St., N. Y. 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 




022 164 069 A 




